4.6 Article

Deletion of connective tissue growth factor ameliorates peritoneal fibrosis by inhibiting angiogenesis and inflammation

Journal

NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 943-953

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfx317

Keywords

CTGF; endothelial cell; macrophages; mesothelial cells; myofibroblast

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [25461246, 26461225, 17K09697, 17K16080]
  2. National Agriculture and Food Research Organization, Smoking Research Foundation
  3. Honjo International Scholarship Foundation
  4. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) [16gm0610010h0104]
  5. Japanese Association of Dialysis Physicians
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26461225, 17K16079, 25461246, 17K09706, 17K16080, 17K09697] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Background. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN2) regulates the signalling of other growth factors and promotes fibrosis. CTGF is increased in mice and humans with peritoneal fibrosis. Inhibition of CTGF has not been examined as a potential therapeutic target for peritoneal fibrosis because systemic CTGF knockout mice die at the perinatal stage. Methods. To study the role of CTGF in peritoneal fibrosis of adult mice, we generated CTGF conditional knockout (cKO) mice by crossing CTGF floxed mice with RosaCreER(T2) mice. We administered tamoxifen to Rosa-CTGF cKO mice to delete the CTGF gene throughout the body. We induced peritoneal fibrosis by intraperitoneal injection of chlorhexidine gluconate (CG) in wild-type and Rosa-CTGF cKO mice. Results. Induction of peritoneal fibrosis in wild-type mice increased CTGF expression and produced severe thickening of the peritoneum. In contrast, CG-treated Rosa-CTGF cKO mice exhibited reduced thickening of the peritoneum. Peritoneal equilibration test revealed that the excessive peritoneal small-solute transport in CG-treated wild-type mice was normalized by CTGF deletion. CG-treated Rosa-CTGF cKO mice exhibited a reduced number of alpha SMA-, Ki67-, CD31- and MAC-2-positive cells in the peritoneum. Analyses of peritoneal mRNA showed that CG-treated Rosa-CTGF cKO mice exhibited reduced expression of Cd68, Acta2 (alpha SMA), Pecam1 (CD31) and Vegfa. Conclusions. These results indicate that a deficiency of CTGF can reduce peritoneal thickening and help to maintain peritoneal function by reducing angiogenesis and inflammation in peritoneal fibrosis. These results suggest that CTGF plays an important role in the progression of peritoneal fibrosis.

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