Does the severity and frequency of proximal tubule injury determine the progression to chronic kidney disease features in a mouse model?
Novel mouse model expressing diphtheria toxin (DT) receptor with variable prevalence in proximal tubules; in vitro coculture of injured tubular cells with fibroblasts
Administration of diphtheria toxin (DT) at varying doses and frequencies (high-dose, single low-dose, repeated low-dose)
Development of chronic kidney disease features (interstitial fibrosis, inflammation, glomerulosclerosis, atubular glomeruli, reduction of erythropoietin production)surrogate
This preclinical study demonstrates that the severity and frequency of proximal tubule injury directly drive the progression to chronic kidney disease, mediated by tubule-fibroblast and proximal-distal tubule crosstalk.
AKI increases the risk of developing CKD, but the mechanisms linking AKI to CKD remain unclear. Because proximal tubule injury is the mainstay of AKI, we postulated that proximal tubule injury triggers features of CKD. We generated a novel mouse model to induce proximal tubule-specific adjustable injury by inducing the expression of diphtheria toxin (DT) receptor with variable prevalence in proximal tubules. Administration of high-dose DT in mice expressing the DT receptor consistently caused severe proximal tubule-specific injury associated with interstitial fibrosis and reduction of erythropoietin production. Mild proximal tubule injury from a single injection of low-dose DT triggered reversible fibrosis, whereas repeated mild injuries caused sustained interstitial fibrosis, inflammation, glomerulosclerosis, and atubular glomeruli. DT-induced proximal tubule-specific injury also triggered distal tubule injury. Furthermore, injured tubular cells cocultured with fibroblasts stimulated induction of extracellular matrix and inflammatory genes. These results support the existence of proximal-distal tubule crosstalk and crosstalk between tubular cells and fibroblasts. Overall, our data provide evidence that proximal tubule injury triggers several features of CKD and that the severity and frequency of proximal tubule injury determines the progression to CKD.
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Koji Takaori
Kyoto Medical Center
Jin Nakamura
The University of Osaka
Shinya Yamamoto
Tokyo Institute of Technology
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
University of California, San Diego
Kyoto University
Niigata University
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Takaori et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07e47a4fa27a561459185 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1681/asn.2015060647