Journal article
Biochemical transformation of calciprotein particles in uraemia
ER Smith, TD Hewitson, E Hanssen, SG Holt
Bone | ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC | Published : 2018
Abstract
Calciprotein particles (CPP) have emerged as nanoscale mediators of phosphate-induced toxicity in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). Uraemia favors ripening of the particle mineral content from the amorphous (CPP-I) to the crystalline state (CPP-II) but the pathophysiological significance of this transformation is uncertain. Clinical studies suggest an association between CPP ripening and inflammation, vascular dysfunction and mortality. Although ripening has been modelled in vitro, it is unknown whether particles synthesised in serum resemble their in vivo counterparts. Here we show that in vitro formation and ripening of CPP in uraemic serum is characterised by extensive physiochemical rearrang..
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Awarded by Amgen
Funding Acknowledgements
The proteomic work was undertaken at Australian Proteome Analysis Facility (Macquarie University, NSW, Australia), infrastructure provided by the Australian Government through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS). This work was generously supported by funding from a Grant-in-aid (GIA-015-2015) from Melbourne Health to ERS, TDH and SGH.