Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6163970 | Kidney International | 2015 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Inflammation culminating in fibrosis contributes to progressive kidney disease. Cross-talk between the tubular epithelium and interstitial cells regulates inflammation by a coordinated release of cytokines and chemokines. Here we studied the role of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) and the heavy subunit of ferritin (FtH) in macrophage polarization and renal inflammation. Deficiency in HO-1 was associated with increased FtH expression, accumulation of macrophages with a dysregulated polarization profile, and increased fibrosis following unilateral ureteral obstruction in mice: a model of renal inflammation and fibrosis. Macrophage polarization in vitro was predominantly dependent on FtH expression in isolated bone marrow-derived mouse monocytes. Using transgenic mice with conditional deletion of FtH in the proximal tubules (FtHPTâ/â) or myeloid cells (FtHLysMâ/â), we found that myeloid FtH deficiency did not affect polarization or accumulation of macrophages in the injured kidney compared with wild-type (FtH+/+) controls. However, tubular FtH deletion led to a marked increase in proinflammatory macrophages. Furthermore, injured kidneys from FtHPTâ/â mice expressed significantly higher levels of inflammatory chemokines and fibrosis compared with kidneys from FtH+/+ and FtHLysMâ/â mice. Thus, there are differential effects of FtH in macrophages and epithelial cells, which underscore the critical role of FtH in tubular-macrophage cross-talk during kidney injury.
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Authors
Subhashini Bolisetty, Abolfazl Zarjou, Travis D. Hull, Amie M. Traylor, Anjana Perianayagam, Reny Joseph, Ahmed I. Kamal, Paolo Arosio, Miguel P. Soares, Viktoria Jeney, Jozsef Balla, James F. George, Anupam Agarwal,