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Glomerular Bioengineering Unit, Department of Medicine, University College London Medical School, The Rayne Institute, London, United Kingdom.
Correspondence to Dr. Masanori Kitamura, Glomerular Bioengineering Unit, Department of Medicine, University College London Medical School, The Rayne Institute, 5 University Street, London WC1E 6JJ, United Kingdom. Phone: +44-171-209-6191; Fax: +44-171-209-6211; E-mail: m.kitamura{at}medicine.ucl.ac.uk
Abstract. Prolonged culture of mesangial cells produces multifocal
nodular structures, i.e., "hillocks," consisting of cells
and extracellular matrix. Hillock formation is associated with induction of a
differentiated phenotype of mesangial cells, with suppressed mitogenesis and
downregulation of
-smooth muscle actin (
-SMA). Currently, little
is understood regarding physiologically relevant factors that facilitate this
cytodifferentiation. This study explores whether and how the cellular redox
state modulates hillock formation. Exposure of confluent rat mesangial cells
to the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC), an inducer of glutathione,
dramatically facilitated hillock formation. This effect was mimicked by
external addition of the reduced form of glutathione ethyl ester. In contrast,
the oxidizing agents diamide and menadione inhibited the development of
hillocks triggered by either NAC, glutathione, or prolonged culture. The
induction of hillocks by NAC was correlated with downregulation of
-SMA
as well as attenuated activity of the CArG box element (the
cis-element relevant to the expression of the
-SMA gene and
growth-associated genes). These results indicate that, by a redox-sensitive
mechanism, NAC induces mesangial cells to create three-dimensional
cytoarchitecture that underlies cellular differentiation.
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