The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study

It is well documented that the incidence of renal disease, and therefore renal dysfunction, increases with age in many species of mammals. Such alterations in renal structure and function may significantly affect long-term toxicology studies. The purpose of this study was to assess the temporal ev...

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Main Author: Pomeroy, Melinda J.
Other Authors: Veterinary Medical Sciences
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30858
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01092002-141421/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-308582020-09-26T05:38:11Z The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study Pomeroy, Melinda J. Veterinary Medical Sciences Robertson, John L. Caceci, Thomas Smith, Bonnie J. Glomerulosclerosis Renal Lesions Aging Collagen It is well documented that the incidence of renal disease, and therefore renal dysfunction, increases with age in many species of mammals. Such alterations in renal structure and function may significantly affect long-term toxicology studies. The purpose of this study was to assess the temporal evolution of glomerulosclerosis, an important renal lesion, in laboratory housed dogs, an important model system in chronic toxicological studies. We histopathologically examined representative sections of dog kidneys, quantified glomerular lesions (using the 0-5 scale of the World Health Organization classification system) and performed of statistical analysis of the extent and distribution of such changes. The kidney samples were obtained by necropsy, and occasionally biopsy, procedures from a collection of 159 purebred Beagle dogs maintained for their entire lifespan in well-controlled conditions. The lesions were correlated with sex, age, and intra-renal location of affected glomeruli to determine the relationship of each in the development of glomerulosclerosis. All dogs examined had some degree of glomerulosclerosis. In the youngest (up to 2 years of age), this was minimal, but was more advanced by middle age (3-7 years). The condition progressed with further aging and was associated with progressive fibrosis and tubular loss. Location and advancing age were significantly related to the development of glomerulosclerosis such that as age increases, the incidence of glomerulosclerosis increases, with the inner medullary ray and inner cortex demonstrating the highest occurrence. Using immunohistochemical analysis, the percentage of type IV collagen within glomeruli was determined. No significant increase in type IV collagen in glomeruli due to age or location was seen. An increase in type III or type V collagen within glomeruli was not apparent either, upon visual examination. This study indicates that renal lesions, including glomerulosclerosis, occur commonly and progress over the lifetime in a genetically similar population of laboratory Beagle dogs maintained under optimal standard environmental conditions. Such typical, age-related change needs to be taken into consideration when conducting chronic toxicological experiments using such animals. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:30:18Z 2014-03-14T20:30:18Z 2001-12-05 2002-01-09 2003-01-10 2002-01-10 Thesis etd-01092002-141421 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30858 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01092002-141421/ MJP2.pdf MJPcv.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Glomerulosclerosis
Renal Lesions
Aging
Collagen
spellingShingle Glomerulosclerosis
Renal Lesions
Aging
Collagen
Pomeroy, Melinda J.
The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
description It is well documented that the incidence of renal disease, and therefore renal dysfunction, increases with age in many species of mammals. Such alterations in renal structure and function may significantly affect long-term toxicology studies. The purpose of this study was to assess the temporal evolution of glomerulosclerosis, an important renal lesion, in laboratory housed dogs, an important model system in chronic toxicological studies. We histopathologically examined representative sections of dog kidneys, quantified glomerular lesions (using the 0-5 scale of the World Health Organization classification system) and performed of statistical analysis of the extent and distribution of such changes. The kidney samples were obtained by necropsy, and occasionally biopsy, procedures from a collection of 159 purebred Beagle dogs maintained for their entire lifespan in well-controlled conditions. The lesions were correlated with sex, age, and intra-renal location of affected glomeruli to determine the relationship of each in the development of glomerulosclerosis. All dogs examined had some degree of glomerulosclerosis. In the youngest (up to 2 years of age), this was minimal, but was more advanced by middle age (3-7 years). The condition progressed with further aging and was associated with progressive fibrosis and tubular loss. Location and advancing age were significantly related to the development of glomerulosclerosis such that as age increases, the incidence of glomerulosclerosis increases, with the inner medullary ray and inner cortex demonstrating the highest occurrence. Using immunohistochemical analysis, the percentage of type IV collagen within glomeruli was determined. No significant increase in type IV collagen in glomeruli due to age or location was seen. An increase in type III or type V collagen within glomeruli was not apparent either, upon visual examination. This study indicates that renal lesions, including glomerulosclerosis, occur commonly and progress over the lifetime in a genetically similar population of laboratory Beagle dogs maintained under optimal standard environmental conditions. Such typical, age-related change needs to be taken into consideration when conducting chronic toxicological experiments using such animals. === Master of Science
author2 Veterinary Medical Sciences
author_facet Veterinary Medical Sciences
Pomeroy, Melinda J.
author Pomeroy, Melinda J.
author_sort Pomeroy, Melinda J.
title The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
title_short The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
title_full The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
title_fullStr The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
title_full_unstemmed The Roles of Age, Glomerular Location, and Collagen Expression in the Canine Kidney: Analysis of a Lifespan Study
title_sort roles of age, glomerular location, and collagen expression in the canine kidney: analysis of a lifespan study
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30858
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01092002-141421/
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