| 2007 JASN IMPACT FACTOR 7.111 | HOME AUTHOR INFO EDITORIAL BOARD SUBSCRIBE FEEDBACK ALERTS HELP | |||
| CURRENT ISSUE | ARCHIVES | JASN Express | ONLINE SUBMISSION | |
BASIC SCIENCE |


*Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, Bergamo, Italy;
Department of Medicine, Duke University and Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, Durham, North Carolina; and
Unit of Nephrology and Dialysis, Azienda Ospedaliera Ospedali Riuniti di Bergamo, Bergamo, Italy
Correspondence to Dr. Ariela Benigni, Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, Via Gavazzeni 11, 24125 Bergamo, Italy. Phone: +39-035-319888; Fax: +39-035-319331; E-mail: abenigni{at}marionegri.it
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Progression to renal parenchymal damage and ESRD, which seems to be largely independent of the initial insult, is the final common pathway for chronic proteinuric nephropathies in animals and humans (4). The key event is enhanced glomerular capillary pressure; this impairs glomerular permeability to proteins and permits excessive amounts of proteins to reach the lumen of the proximal tubule (4,5). The secondary process of tubular reabsorption of filtered proteins can contribute to renal interstitial injury by activating intracellular events, including upregulation of the genes encoding vasoactive and inflammatory mediators (5). Thus, proteinuria is a major determinant of disease progression in both experimental and human nephropathies to the extent that the degree of urinary protein excretion correlates with the magnitude of renal damage in experimental models, and proteinuria reduction helps to preserve renal function (4). Both interstitial inflammation and progression of renal disease can be controlled by drugs that inhibit the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), such as angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin II (Ang II) type 1 receptor antagonists, which strengthen the glomerular permeability barrier to proteins and thereby limit proteinuria and filtered protein-dependent inflammatory signals.
Emerging evidence indicates that Ang IIthe main effector of the RASalso stimulates the synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins, inflammatory cytokines, and growth factors by renal tubule cells, eventually contributing to interstitial inflammation and scarring (68). Together, these findings have been echoed in the debate of whether renoprotection afforded by RAS blockers is due to their capacity to limit excess protein ultrafiltration and its deleterious consequences or through the alternative but not mutually exclusive pathway of reducing the proinflammatory and profibrotic effects of Ang II. So far, however, this question remains unanswered because abnormal glomerular protein trafficking and activation of renin-angiotensin cascade are so interrelated that dissecting their relative contribution to chronic renal damage has been difficult.
The biologic roles of Ang II are elicited through binding to specific type 1 (AT1) and type 2 (AT2) receptors. Among the AT1 receptors, two subtypes, AT1A and AT1B, have been identified in human, rat, and mouse (9,10). These receptors are products of separate genes and share substantial sequence homology (11). In mice, the AT1A receptor is the major AT1 receptor isoform (12) and is the closest homologue to the human AT1 receptor. We used genetically modified mice lacking the AT1A receptor (AT1A) (13) to address the mechanism of RAS blockadeinduced renoprotection and ultimately the relative contribution of protein-overload proteinuria and Ang II to chronic renal damage.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Murine Model of Protein-Overload Proteinuria
BSA-overload proteinuria was induced in AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ mice that were uninephrectomized under anesthesia 5 d before starting BSA injections (16). Low-endotoxin BSA (Sigma A-9430) was dissolved in saline and given 5 d weekly intraperitoneally at the dose of 10 mg/g body wt for 4 or 11 wk. Unilateral nephrectomy per se did not affect proteinuria or glomerulosclerosis in AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ animals that were given saline (proteinuria, mg/d, AT1A+/+: 8 ± 0.8 versus 7 ± 1; AT1A/: 6 ± 1 versus 7 ± 0.4; glomerulosclerosis, %, AT1A+/+: 0 versus 0.2 ± 0.2 AT1A/: 0 versus 0), which is in line with previous observations that genetic background is an important factor determining susceptibility to the development of renal damage in mice (17,18). During the study, nonuninephrectomized mice were used as controls. AT1A+/+ uninephrectomized BSA mice were actual controls for AT1A/ uninephrectomized BSA ones.
Experimental Design
Short-Term Experiments.
Male mice were divided as follows: AT1A+/+ (n = 11) and AT1A/ (n = 7) mice received daily intraperitoneal injections of BSA (10 mg/g) and were killed at 4 wk. AT1A+/+ (n = 6) and AT1A/ (n = 6) mice that received saline were followed for 4 wk and used as controls. Systolic BP (SBP), serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and urinary excretion of endothelin-1 (ET-1) were measured at 4 wk. Urinary protein excretion was monitored along the study. When the mice were killed, kidneys were removed and processed for histologic analysis and renal expression of ET-1 mRNA and protein.
Long-Term Experiments.
AT1A+/+ (n = 11) and AT1A/ (n = 7) mice received daily intraperitoneal injections of BSA (10 mg/g) and were killed at 11 wk. For ruling out that possible difference in renal injury between BSA-treated AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ mice could be due to the different BP levels previously reported in the two strains (14), an additional group of AT1A+/+ (n = 7) mice were treated daily with the dihydropyridinic calcium channel blocker lacidipine (3 mg/kg) by gavage (19). AT1A+/+ (n = 6) and AT1A/ (n = 6) mice that received saline were followed for 11 wk and used as controls. SBP, urinary protein excretion, and serum BUN were assessed at 11 wk. When the mice were killed, kidneys were removed and processed for histologic analysis and evaluation of F4/80-positive monocyte/macrophage accumulation in the renal interstitium.
Analyticals
SBP was recorded by tail plethysmography in conscious mice. Noninvasive tail-cuff system for measuring BP in mice has been found to be reproducible and correlated with intra-arterial BP measurements (14,20). Twenty-four-hour urine samples were collected using metabolic cages, and proteinuria was determined by modified Coomassie blue G dye-binding assay for proteins with BSA as standard. Renal function was assessed as BUN in serum samples using an enzymatic UV Rate by Sincron CX-5 (Beckman, Fullerton, CA).
Renal Histology
The removed kidneys were fixed overnight in Duboscq-Brazil, dehydrated in alcohol, and embedded in paraffin. Kidney samples were sectioned at 3 µm intervals, and the sections were stained with Massons trichrome, hematoxylin and eosin, and periodic acid-Schiff reagent. Tubular (atrophy, casts, and dilation) and interstitial changes (fibrosis and inflammation) were graded from 0 to 4+ (0, no changes; 1+, changes affecting <25% of the sample; 2+, changes affecting 25 to 50% of the sample; 3+, changes affecting 50 to 75% of the sample; 4+, changes affecting 75 to 100% of the sample). At least 100 glomeruli were examined for each animal, and the extent of glomerular damage was expressed as the percentage of glomeruli that presented sclerotic lesions. All renal biopsies were analyzed by the same pathologist, who was unaware of the nature of the experimental groups.
Evaluation of Inflammatory Cell Infiltrates
Renal tissue was fixed overnight in Duboscq Brazil, dehydrated in alcohol, and embedded in paraffin. Three-micrometer sections were dewaxed and taken through graded alcohols to PBS. Rat monoclonal antibody against a cytoplasmic antigen present in mouse monocytes and macrophages (F4/80, 5 µg/ml; Serotec, Oxford, UK) was used for the detection of infiltrating cells by immunoperoxidase technique. Sections were incubated for 30 min with 0.3% H2O2 in methanol to quench endogenous peroxidase. Then the tissue was permeabilized in 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS 0.01 mol/L (pH 7.2) for 30 min and then incubated with normal goat serum (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 30 min. Primary antibody was incubated overnight at 4°C, followed by the secondary antibody (biotinylated goat anti-rat IgG; Vector Laboratories) and avidin-biotin peroxidase complex (ABC) solution, and development with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride. The sections were counterstained with Harris hematoxylin. Negative controls were obtained by omitting the primary antibody. F4/80-labeled cells were counted in 30 randomly selected high-power microscopic fields (x400) per animal.
Immunolocalization of ET-1
Kidney sections that were fixed in Duboscq-Brazil were deparaffinized and dehydrated. Microwave heating of tissue sections was performed twice for 5 min in citrate buffer with an operating frequency of 2450 MHz and 600-W power output. After blocking for 30 min in 1% BSA (Sigma), the sections were incubated overnight with the rabbit antiET-1 primary antibody (Peninsula Laboratories, San Carlos, CA; 1:500) at 4°C. Then they were rinsed with PBS and incubated with biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Vector Laboratories; 1:200) for 30 min at room temperature. Alkaline phosphataseconjugated streptavidin (Roche Diagnostic) was applied at a dilution of 1:50 for 30 min. The reaction product was visualized by incubation with Fast Red substrate (Vector Laboratories) as described (21). Counterstaining was performed by using Harris hematoxylin (Bio-Optica, Milan, Italy). Negative controls included the use of antiET-1 antibody absorbed for 4 h with synthetic ET-1 or nonimmune serum instead of the primary antibody. Signal intensity was graded on a scale of 0 to 3 (0, no staining; 1, weak; 2, moderate; 3, strong intensity).
Real-Time PCR
Total RNA was extracted from the whole-kidney tissue by the guanidium isothiocyanate/cesium chloride procedure. Contaminating genomic DNA was removed by RNase-free DNase (Promega, Ingelheim, Germany) for 1 h at 37°C. The purified RNA (1 µg) was reverse-transcribed using random examers oligonucleotides and 200 U of SuperScript II RT (Life Technologies, San Giuliano Milanese, Italy) for 1 h at 42°C. No enzyme was added for reverse transcriptasenegative controls.
Real-time PCR was performed on Gene Amp ABI 5700 Sequence Detection System (PE Biosystems, Warrington, UK) using heat-activated TaqDNA polymerase (Amplitaq Gold; PE Biosystems). The SYBR Green I PCR Reagents kit was used according to the manufacturers protocol. After an initial hold of 2 min at 50°C and 10 min at 95°C, the samples were cycled 40 times at 95°C for 15 s and 60°C for 60 s to reach the plateau. Fluorescence detection, defined as threshold cycle (Ct), is automatically picked in the exponential phase of the PCR and used for the relative quantification of the target gene. The comparative Ct method normalizes the number of target gene copies to a housekeeping gene as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (
Ct). Gene expression was then evaluated by the quantification of cDNA corresponding with the target gene relative to a control sample serving as a physiologic reference (e.g., AT1A+/+ or AT1A/ given saline, 
Ct). On the basis of exponential amplification of the target gene, the amount of amplified molecules at the Ct is given by 2
Ct. The following oligonucleotide primers (300 nM) were used: mouse ET-1 sense 5'-AACTACGAAGGTTGGAGGCCA, antisense 5'-CACGAAAAGATGCCTTGATGC; glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase sense 5'-TCATCCCTGCATCCACTGGT, antisense 5'-CTGGGATGACCTTGCCCAC. All primers were obtained from Sigma Genosys (Cambridgeshire, UK). True identity of the amplification products was ensured by primer specificity for ET-1 rat sequence, the presence of a single dissociation curve at a constant T melting, and the lack of genomic DNA contamination or primer dimers in RT samples.
Urinary ET-1 Measurement
Urinary ET-1 levels were evaluated by RIA after extraction with Sep-pak C18 (Waters, Milford, MA) as described previously (22). Cross-reactivity of the ET-1 antibody (Peninsula Laboratories, San Carlos, CA) was as follows: ET-2, 46.9%; ET-3, 17%; and big-ET-1, 9.4%. Results corrected for the recovery were expressed as pg/d.
Statistical Analyses
Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. Data were analyzed using the nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis test for multiple comparisons. The statistical significance level was defined as P < 0.05.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
Renal ET-1 in AT1A/ Protein-Overload Mice.
In animal models of proteinuric progressive kidney disease, the renal synthesis of ET-1 is increased (24). Moreover, in double-transgenic rats that harbor both human renin and angiotensinogen genes, ET-1 mediates inflammatory processes related to Ang IIinduced heart and kidney tissue damage (25). We therefore determined the effect of protein overload on intrarenal ET-1 gene expression and synthesis in AT1A knockout mice. Four weeks of BSA injections stimulated transcription of ET-1 gene in kidneys of AT1A+/+ mice; ET-1 mRNA levels were threefold increased with respect to AT1A+/+ mice that received saline (Figure 3A). A similar upregulation of ET-1 gene expression was observed in AT1A/BSA animals (Figure 3A). These changes in intrarenal ET-1 gene expression were accompanied by enhanced synthesis of ET-1 peptide. In this regard, urinary ET-1 excretionwhich reflects the renal synthesis of the peptide (22)was significantly increased in AT1A+/+BSA mice (Figure 3B). Similarly, ET-1 excretion rate was increased to a similar extent in protein-overloaded AT1A/BSA animals (Figure 3B). In both groups, the urinary ET-1 was significantly higher than in the corresponding AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ animals that received saline. To assess the distribution of ET-1 protein within the kidney, we performed immunohistochemistry experiments, and representative pictures are shown in Figure 4. In AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ animals that received saline, a weak staining was found in tubular epithelial cells and parietal epithelial cells. Tubular staining was more intense in some cortical areas. Results of semiquantitative assessment of ET-1 staining were comparable in these groups (1 ± 0.2 versus 1.2 ± 0.1). ET-1 staining markedly and significantly (P < 0.01) increased in the kidneys of protein-overloaded AT1A+/+ and AT1A/ animals both in tubular cells and, to much lesser extent, in glomerular epithelial cells. Mononuclear cells in some focal infiltrates showed strong ET-1 staining. Results of semiquantitative analysis showed significant (P < 0.01) differences as compared with animals that were given saline (AT1A+/+ BSA, 1.8 ± 0.1; AT1A/BSA, 2.6 ± 0.2).
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Reduced susceptibility to kidney damage in mice that lack AT1A receptor could have been the consequence of lower systemic BP levels in AT1A/ vis à vis AT1A+/+ mice (14). A strong graded relation exists between BP and the severity of renal lesions in experimental animals independent from the underlying disease. Such relation has also been found in various renal diseases as highlighted in a recent pooled analysis of the major clinical studies (30). However, tight BP control uniformly slows disease progression and reduces injury. Of interest, in this context, data in humans have been provided recently to indicate that further lowering of BP as compared with previous guidelines is uniformly renoprotective (30,31). Because increases in BP levels in nephropathies translate in glomerular hypertension (32) and serve to enhance proteinuria, animal studies have been unable to dissociate the deleterious effect of BP per se from that of proteinuria. To dissect their relative contribution to chronic renal damage, we conducted additional long-term control experiments using the protein-overloaded AT1A+/+ mice, whose BP was kept lower by administration of the calcium channel blocker lacidipine throughout the experiment. Dihydropyridinic calcium antagonists are effective in lowering BP without interfering with the size-selective properties of the glomerular basement membrane (33). Reducing BP of AT1A+/+BSA mice to levels comparable to AT1A/BSA mice resulted in comparable values of protein excretion rate, similar degree of glomerular and tubulointerstitial lesions, and same amount of F4/80-positive cells infiltrating the kidney. Whether this last effect could be due to an anti-inflammatory response induced by lacidipine as it occurred in an Ang IIdependent transgenic rat model (34) could not be completely ruled out. Despite that no compensatory upregulation has been observed in the expression of AT1B or AT2 receptors in the mouse line here used (13), it is theoretically possible that the renal pathology observed in AT1A/ mice could be attributable to changes of those receptors. Several hurdles make it unfeasible to explore the contribution of the AT1B receptors residual activity in the renal phenotype of overload proteinuria. Mutant strains of mice that lack both AT1A and AT1B receptors have significantly reduced postnatal survival and spontaneously develop renal pathology that could confound the effect of overload proteinuria (13). Furthermore, blockade of AT1B through an AT1 receptor antagonist could not be of help in this setting because of the proteinuria-lowering effect of Ang II blockers. A number of studies have documented that signaling through AT2 receptor results in vasodilation through a direct or bradykinin-induced stimulation of nitric oxide (35) and mediates antiproliferative responses and apoptosis (36,37). In line with the latter effect are data showing that AT2 receptor null mice display deficient apoptosis and increased fibrosis after ureteral obstruction (38). By contrast, overexpression of AT2 receptors protected mice with renal mass reduction from the development of renal lesions (39). The similarity of the beneficial effect of ACE inhibitors and AT1 receptor antagonists in experimental models and clinical studies would further support the notion that AT2 receptor stimulation does not contribute to the pathogenesis of renal disease. Other recent studies have challenged the view of AT2 as a "protective" receptor (40) and provided evidence that the growth stimulatory and proinflammatory effects of Ang II also may be transduced by AT2, which induces glomerular cell proliferation and monocyte/macrophage infiltration, albeit to a lower extent than AT1 receptor (41,42). This observation together with the evidence of AT2 upregulation in protein-overload proteinuria (43) would offer the rationale for studies with specific AT2 antagonists. However, the recent demonstration that these compounds had some antiproteinuric effect in rats with progressive renal injury (42) would render difficult their use to discriminate the role of Ang II through AT2 receptors and proteinuria. It would have been nice to explore the potential role for AT2 receptors. However, because experiments with specific antagonists are unlikely to provide a clearcut answer to the question of a possible role for the reasons described above, we are forced to conclude that the present study cannot rule out the possibility that Ang II still induces renal damage in AT1A/ mice via AT2 type receptors. Renal lesions that develop in animals with targeted disruption of AT1A receptor should not be taken to disregard the additional role of Ang II in chronic renal disease. Experimental and human studies have convincingly documented that Ang II has a central role in glomerular hemodynamic changes associated with progressive renal injury (44). Nonhemodynamic effects of Ang II might be important as well (45). Those include renal cell proliferation, exuberant TGF-
synthesis, and activation of infiltrating macrophages. The additional role of Ang II is in keeping with findings here that renal lesions were more severe in AT1A+/+ mice. Proteinuria was also more severe in AT1A+/+ mice than in AT1A/ mice. More proteinuria in AT1A+/+ mice that were exposed to protein overload reflects size-selective dysfunction possibly involving podocytes and podocyte slit diaphragm architecture. Podocytesthe critical component of barrier size selectivity (46)express on their surface specific receptors for Ang II that govern cytoskeletal organization upon stimulation. This is consistent with data in isolated perfused kidney that infusion of Ang II enhances filtration of large macromolecules and promotes proteinuria, and these effects are prevented by losartan (47). In vivo in animals and humans with proteinuric nephropathies, drugs that inhibit binding of Ang II to AT1 receptors ameliorate glomerular size-selective function, normalize proteinuria, and retard disease progression (48,49).
An additional finding of the present study was that both intrarenal gene expression and synthesis of ET-1, a mediator of tubulointerstitial damage, were upregulated at comparable levels in AT1A deficient and wild-type BSA-overloaded mice. Changes in renal ET-1 expression and synthesis are similar to those reported in the study by Suzuki et al. (8) that was aimed at examining the potential interrelationship between Ang II and ET-1 in the tubulointerstitial damage in AT1A deficient mice and pointing out the higher-than-normal expression of ET-1 in tubular epithelial cells. Notably, the administration of an ET-1 receptor antagonist to AT1A deficient mice effectively reduced the interstitial cell infiltrates without affecting proteinuria (8). Phenotypic changes of proximal tubular cells triggered by excessive protein reabsorption include the induction of ET-1 synthetic pathway (24) to the extent that ACE inhibitors by normalizing proteinuria reduced excessive ET-1 synthesis in renal tubuli. Whether changes in ET-1 synthesis were a direct effect of protein overload or rather a consequence of Ang II, a major stimulus for ET-1 in renal cells (8,50), remains elusive so far. Findings here of comparable expression of ET-1 in AT1A/ and AT1A+/+ mice after protein overload indicate that proteinuria rather than Ang II triggers renal ET-1 upregulation in progressive nephropathies.
In summary, our findings indicate that proteinuria might be a player for renal damage even independent from Ang II. These observations together with previous findings in humans that early changes in proteinuria predict long-term disease progression independent of BP control (51) provide a clear rationale for specifically targeting proteinuria in renoprotective pharmacologic interventions.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
We are greatly indebted to Chris Best for breeding and genotyping animals at the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Durham, NC). We are grateful to Drs. Mauro Abbate and Paola Maggioni for invaluable help with histologic evaluation and to Daniela Rottoli for the technical support.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. Abbate, C. Zoja, D. Corna, D. Rottoli, C. Zanchi, N. Azzollini, S. Tomasoni, S. Berlingeri, M. Noris, M. Morigi, et al. Complement-Mediated Dysfunction of Glomerular Filtration Barrier Accelerates Progressive Renal Injury J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., June 1, 2008; 19(6): 1158 - 1167. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. Theilig, W. Kriz, T. Jerichow, P. Schrade, B. Hahnel, T. Willnow, M. Le Hir, and S. Bachmann Abrogation of Protein Uptake through Megalin-Deficient Proximal Tubules Does Not Safeguard against Tubulointerstitial Injury J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., June 1, 2007; 18(6): 1824 - 1834. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
L. Shalamanova, F. McArdle, A. B. Amara, M. J. Jackson, and R. Rustom Albumin overload induces adaptive responses in human proximal tubular cells through oxidative stress but not via angiotensin II type 1 receptor Am J Physiol Renal Physiol, June 1, 2007; 292(6): F1846 - F1857. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Abbate, C. Zoja, and G. Remuzzi How Does Proteinuria Cause Progressive Renal Damage? J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., November 1, 2006; 17(11): 2974 - 2984. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. Benigni, C. Zoja, S. Tomasoni, M. Campana, D. Corna, C. Zanchi, E. Gagliardini, E. Garofano, D. Rottoli, T. Ito, et al. Transcriptional Regulation of Nephrin Gene by Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-{gamma} Agonist: Molecular Mechanism of the Antiproteinuric Effect of Pioglitazone J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., June 1, 2006; 17(6): 1624 - 1632. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
N. Dhaun, J. Goddard, and DavidJ. Webb The Endothelin System and Its Antagonism in Chronic Kidney Disease J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., April 1, 2006; 17(4): 943 - 955. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Morigi, S. Buelli, S. Angioletti, C. Zanchi, L. Longaretti, C. Zoja, M. Galbusera, S. Gastoldi, P. Mundel, G. Remuzzi, et al. In Response to Protein Load Podocytes Reorganize Cytoskeleton and Modulate Endothelin-1 Gene: Implication for Permselective Dysfunction of Chronic Nephropathies Am. J. Pathol., May 1, 2005; 166(5): 1309 - 1320. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
HOME
CURRENT ISSUE
ARCHIVES
JASN Express
ONLINE SUBMISSION
AUTHOR INFO
EDITORIAL BOARD SUBSCRIBE FEEDBACK ALERTS HELP |