4.7 Article

Heme Oxygenase-1 Regulates Myeloid Cell Trafficking in AKI

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 2139-2151

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2014080770

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01-DK59600, R01-DK083390, T32-DK7545]
  2. UAB-UCSD O'Brien Center [P30-DK079337]
  3. American Heart Association [13PRE17000013, 11POST7600074]
  4. International Society of Nephrology
  5. Department of Veterans Affairs from the Office of Research and Development, Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans Affairs [1K2-BX001581]
  6. NIH [P30-AR048311, P30-AI027767]

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Renal ischemia-reperfusion injury is mediated by a complex cascade of events, including the immune response, that occur secondary to injury to renal epithelial cells. We tested the hypothesis that heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression, which is protective in ischemia-reperfusion injury, regulates trafficking of myeloid-derived immune cells in the kidney. Age-matched male wild-type (HO-1(+/+)), HO-1-knockout (HO-1(-/-)), and humanized HO-1-overexpressing (HBAC) mice underwent bilateral renal ischemia for 10 minutes. Ischemia-reperfusion injury resulted in significantly worse renal structure and function and increased mortality in HO-1(-/-) mice. In addition, there were more macrophages (CD45(+) CD11b(hi)F4/80(lo)) and neutrophils (CD45(+) CD11b(hi) MHCII- Gr-1(hi)) in HO-1(-/-) kidneys than in sham and HO-1(+/+) control kidneys subjected to ischemia-reperfusion. However, ischemic injury resulted in a significant decrease in the intrarenal resident dendritic cell (DC; CD45(+)MHCII(+) CD11b(lo)F4/80(hi)) population in HO-1(-/-) kidneys compared with controls. Syngeneic transplant experiments utilizing green fluorescent protein-positive HO-1(+/+) orHO-1(-/-) donor kidneys and green fluorescent protein-negative HO-1(+/+) recipients confirmed increased migration of the resident DC population from HO-1(-/-) donor kidneys, compared to HO-1(+/+) donor kidneys, to the peripheral lymphoid organs. This effect on renal DC migration was corroborated in myeloid-specific HO-1(-/-) mice subjected to bilateral ischemia. These mice also displayed impaired renal recovery and increased fibrosis at day 7 after injury. These results highlight an important role for HO-1 in orchestrating the trafficking of myeloid cells in AKI, which may represent a key pathway for therapeutic intervention.

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