PMID: 8950229Nov 1, 1996Paper

Effect of chronic renal failure on the expression of erythropoietin message in a murine model

Experimental Hematology
F ZhangA G Brox

Abstract

The anemia of chronic renal failure (CRF) is largely due to decreased production of erythropoietin (EPO) by the kidney. A small amount of EPO also originates from extra-renal sources, and this would be expected to assume a more important role in maintaining erythropoiesis when renal production is impaired. In this study, we examined the production of EPO mRNA by RT-PCR in kidney, liver, and bone marrow tissues isolated from normal mice, mice rendered acutely anemic by phlebotomy, and from mice with surgically induced CRF. The induction of acute anemia results in an expected increase in the expression of EPO mRNA in renal and hepatic tissue. In contrast, while the expression of EPO mRNA was expectedly reduced in the kidney from CRF mice, it was completely absent in the liver of these same animals. EPO mRNA expression was also absent in the bone marrow in both states of acute anemia and CRF. These results show that CRF can directly or indirectly can suppress the extrarenal production of EPO by the liver and that this effect may further aggravate the anemia of CRF.

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