Yamamoto S, Yancey PG, Zuo Y, Ma LJ, Kaseda R, Fogo AB, Ichikawa I, Linton MF, Fazio S, Kon V. Macrophage polarization by angiotensin II-type 1 receptor aggravates renal injury-acceleration of atherosclerosis. (2011) Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 31: 2856-64 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Angiotensin II is a major determinant of atherosclerosis. Although macrophages are the most abundant cells in atherosclerotic plaques and express angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1), the pathophysiologic role of macrophage AT1 in atherogenesis remains uncertain. We examined the contribution of macrophage AT1 to accelerated atherosclerosis in an angiotensin II-responsive setting induced by uninephrectomy (UNx). | Publication | 21979434 (PMID) PMC3227118 (PMCID) 10.1161/ATVBAHA.111.237198 (DOI) |
Yang HC, Rossini M, Ma LJ, Zuo Y, Ma J, Fogo AB. Cells derived from young bone marrow alleviate renal aging. (2011) J Am Soc Nephrol 22: 2028-36 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Bone marrow-derived stem cells may modulate renal injury, but the effects may depend on the age of the stem cells. Here we investigated whether bone marrow from young mice attenuates renal aging in old mice. We radiated female 12-mo-old 129SvJ mice and reconstituted them with bone marrow cells (BMC) from either 8-wk-old (young-to-old) or 12-mo-old (old-to-old) male mice. Transfer of young BMC resulted in markedly decreased deposition of collagen IV in the mesangium and less β-galactosidase staining, an indicator of cell senescence. These changes paralleled reduced expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), PDGF-B (PDGF-B), the transdifferentiation marker fibroblast-specific protein-1 (FSP-1), and senescence-associated p16 and p21. Tubulointerstitial and glomerular cells derived from the transplanted BMC did not show β-galactosidase activity, but after 6 mo, there were more FSP-1-expressing bone marrow-derived cells in old-to-old mice compared with young-to-old mice. Young-to-old mice also exhibited higher expression of the anti-aging gene Klotho and less phosphorylation of IGF-1 receptor β. Taken together, these data suggest that young bone marrow-derived cells can alleviate renal aging in old mice. Direct parenchymal reconstitution by stem cells, paracrine effects from adjacent cells, and circulating anti-aging molecules may mediate the aging of the kidney. | Publication | 21965376 (PMID) PMC3231782 (PMCID) 10.1681/ASN.2010090982 (DOI) |
Matsusaka T, Sandgren E, Shintani A, Kon V, Pastan I, Fogo AB, Ichikawa I. Podocyte injury damages other podocytes. (2011) J Am Soc Nephrol 22: 1275-85 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Loss of podocytes promotes glomerulosclerosis, but whether this results from a continued primary insult or a secondary mechanism triggered by the initial loss of podocytes is unknown. We generated chimeric mice in which only a subpopulation of podocytes expressed hCD25, which is the receptor for the immunotoxin LMB2. In addition, genetic labeling of hCD25-negative cells with human placental alkaline phosphatase allowed the study of these two distinct podocyte populations. Administration of LMB2 did not cause podocyte injury in hCD25-negative control mice. In contrast, LMB2 severely damaged or sloughed off the subpopulation of hCD25-positive podocytes within the chimeric glomeruli. Moreover, hCD25-negative podocytes, which were immune to the initial toxin injury, developed injury as early as 4 d after LMB2 injection, evidenced by foot process effacement, upregulation of desmin, and downregulation of nephrin, podocin, and podocalyxin. Furthermore, the magnitude of secondary injury correlated with the magnitude of primary injury, supporting the concept of an amplified cascade of podocyte injury. In conclusion, podocyte damage can propagate injury by triggering secondary damage of "remnant" intact podocytes, even when the primary insult is short-lived. This transmission of podocyte injury may form a vicious cycle leading to accelerated podocyte deterioration and glomerulosclerosis. | Publication | 21719786 (PMID) PMC3137575 (PMCID) 10.1681/ASN.2010090963 (DOI) |
Fogo AB. The targeted podocyte. (2011) J Clin Invest 121: 2142-5 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012The podocyte plays a key role both in maintenance of the glomerular filtration barrier and in glomerular structural integrity. Podocyte injury and loss contribute to proteinuria and progressive sclerosis. Inhibitors of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) have variably decreased or caused proteinuria and sclerosis in human disease and experimental settings. In this issue of the JCI, two interesting studies of podocyte-specific manipulation of the mTOR system shed light on the complexity of this pathway in the podocyte. | Publication | 21606599 (PMID) PMC3104780 (PMCID) 10.1172/JCI57935 (DOI) |
Zuo Y, Yang HC, Potthoff SA, Najafian B, Kon V, Ma LJ, Fogo AB. Protective effects of PPAR{gamma} agonist in acute nephrotic syndrome. (2011) Nephrol Dial Transplant : Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Background Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) agonists have beneficial effects on renal structure and function in models of diabetes and chronic kidney diseases. However, the increased incidence of weight gain and edema potentially limits their usefulness. We studied an acute minimal-change disease-like nephrotic syndrome model to assess effects of PPARγ agonist on acute podocyte injury and effects on fluid homeostasis. Methods Acute podocyte injury and nephrotic syndrome were induced by puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN) injection in rats. Results PPARγ agonist, given at the time or after, but not before PAN, reduced proteinuria, restored synaptopodin, decreased desmin and trended to improve foot process effacement. There was no significant difference in glomerular filtration, effective circulating volume, blood pressure or fractional sodium excretion. PAN-injured podocytes had decreased PPARγ, less nephrin and α-actinin-4, more apoptosis and reduced phosphorylated Akt. In PAN-injured cultured podocytes, PPARγ agonist also reversed abnormalities only when given simultaneously or after injury. Conclusions These results show that PPARγ agonist has protective effects on podocytes in acute nephrotic syndrome without deleterious effects on fluid homeostasis. PPARγ agonist-induced decrease in proteinuria in acute nephrotic syndrome is dependent at least partially on regulation of peroxisome proliferator-response element-sensitive gene expression such as α-actinin-4 and nephrin and the restoration of podocyte structure. | Publication | 21565943 (PMID) 10.1093/ndt/gfr240 (DOI) |
Ma J, Matsusaka T, Yang HC, Zhong J, Takagi N, Fogo AB, Kon V, Ichikawa I. Induction of podocyte-derived VEGF ameliorates podocyte injury and subsequent abnormal glomerular development caused by puromycin aminonucleoside. (2011) Pediatr Res 70: 83-9 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Our previous studies using puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN) established that podocyte damage leads to glomerular growth arrest during development and glomerulosclerosis later in life. This study examined the potential benefit of maintaining podocyte-derived VEGF in podocyte defense and survival after PAN injury using conditional transgenic podocytes and mice, in which human VEGF-A (hVEGF) transgene expression is controlled by tetracycline responsive element (TRE) promoter and reverse tetracycline transactivator (rtTA) in podocytes. In vitro experiments used primary cultured podocytes harvested from mice carrying podocin-rtTA and TRE-hVEGF transgenes, in which hVEGF can be induced selectively. Induction of VEGF in PAN-exposed podocytes resulted in preservation of intrinsic VEGF, α-actinin-4 and synaptopodin, antiapoptotic marker Bcl-xL/Bax, as well as attenuation in apoptotic marker cleaved/total caspase-3. In vivo, compared with genotype controls, PAN-sensitive neonatal mice with physiologically relevant levels of podocyte-derived VEGF showed significantly larger glomeruli. Furthermore, PAN-induced up-regulation of desmin, down-regulation of synaptopodin and nephrin, and disruption of glomerular morphology were significantly attenuated in VEGF-induced transgenic mice. Our data indicate that podocyte-derived VEGF provides self-preservation functions, which can rescue the cell after injury and preempt subsequent deterioration of the glomerulus in developing mice. | Publication | 21451433 (PMID) PMC3113658 (PMCID) 10.1203/PDR.0b013e31821bdf1c (DOI) |
Ma LJ, Corsa BA, Zhou J, Yang H, Li H, Tang YW, Babaev VR, Major AS, Linton MF, Fazio S, Hunley TE, Kon V, Fogo AB. Angiotensin type 1 receptor modulates macrophage polarization and renal injury in obesity. (2011) Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 300: F1203-13 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012The mechanisms for increased risk of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in obesity remain unclear. The renin-angiotensin system is implicated in the pathogenesis of both adiposity and CKD. We investigated whether the angiotensin type 1 (AT(1)) receptor, composed of dominant AT(1a) and less expressed AT(1b) in wild-type (WT) mice, modulates development and progression of kidney injury in a high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity model. WT mice had increased body weight, body fat, and insulin levels and decreased adiponectin levels after 24 wk of a high-fat diet. Identically fed AT(1a) knockout (AT1aKO) mice gained weight similarly to WT mice, but had lower body fat and higher plasma cholesterol. Both obese AT1aKO and obese WT mice had increased visceral fat and kidney macrophage infiltration, with more proinflammatory M1 macrophage markers as well as increased mesangial expansion and tubular vacuolization, compared with lean mice. These abnormalities were heightened in the obese AT1aKO mice, with downregulated M2 macrophage markers and increased macrophage AT(1b) receptor. Treatment with an AT(1) receptor blocker, which affects both AT(1a) and AT(1b), abolished renal macrophage infiltration with inhibition of renal M1 and upregulation of M2 macrophage markers in obese WT mice. Our data suggest obesity accelerates kidney injury, linked to augmented inflammation in adipose and kidney tissues and a proinflammatory shift in macrophage and M1/M2 balance. | Publication | 21367915 (PMID) PMC3094053 (PMCID) 10.1152/ajprenal.00468.2010 (DOI) |
Yang HC, Zuo Y, Fogo AB. Models of chronic kidney disease. (2010) Drug Discov Today Dis Models 7: 13-19 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Chronic kidney diseases result from recurrent or progressive injuries in glomeruli, tubules, interstitium and/or vasculature. In order to study pathogenesis, mechanisms and effects of interventions, many animal models have been developed, including spontaneous, genetic and induced models. However, these models do not exactly simulate human diseases, and most of them are strain, gender or age dependent. We review key information on various rodent models of chronic kidney diseases. | Publication | 21286234 (PMID) PMC3030258 (PMCID) 10.1016/j.ddmod.2010.08.002 (DOI) |
Matsusaka T, Kobayashi K, Kon V, Pastan I, Fogo AB, Ichikawa I. Glomerular sclerosis is prevented during urinary tract obstruction due to podocyte protection. (2011) Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 300: F792-800 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Urine outflow obstruction activates a variety of profibrotic factors, including the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system. However, the obstruction also nullifies the transmural hydraulic pressure difference across the glomerular capillary wall, an established inducer of glomerulosclerosis. In the present study, we investigated whether, and by what mechanism, urine outflow obstruction affects the process of progressive glomerulosclerosis. For this purpose, we tested the effect of unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) of 7 days duration in two distinct mouse models of glomerulosclerosis. In the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) nephropathy model, where HIV-1 genes are selectively expressed in podocytes and develop progressive podocyte damage and glomerulosclerosis, UUO protected against sclerosis with preservation of podocytes morphologically and immunohistochemically. In contrast, the nonobstructed contralateral kidneys of these mice, as well as sham-operated HIV-1 mouse kidneys, developed severe podocyte injury and glomerulosclerosis. The protection against glomerulosclerosis imparted by ureteral obstruction was also documented in the NEP25 model of podocyte injury, in which a single injection of immunotoxin, LMB2, triggers selective podocyte injury followed by glomerulosclerosis, both of which were protected by UUO. Notably, intervention with an angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonist provided only a partial protective effect in each of the models. These results demonstrate that urine outflow obstruction protects the glomerulus from progressive sclerosis. The results further reveal that this protection occurs at a very early stage of the pathologic process, namely, damage of podocytes. | Publication | 21177778 (PMID) PMC3064125 (PMCID) 10.1152/ajprenal.00570.2010 (DOI) |
Fogo AB, Alpers CE. Navigating the challenges of fibrosis assessment: land in sight? (2011) J Am Soc Nephrol 22: 11-3 Added January 20, 2012 | Publication | 21127139 (PMID) 10.1681/ASN.2010111132 (DOI) |
Yang H, Fogo AB. Cell senescence in the aging kidney. (2010) J Am Soc Nephrol 21: 1436-9 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Pedigree genetics and environment modulate the biological process of aging. The permanent and irreversible growth arrest of cell senescence is a central paradigm of aging. Various pathophysiologic pressures such as oxidative stress and mitochondrial injury can also induce senescence. Senescent cells secrete altered levels of growth factors, show increased susceptibility to apoptosis, and associate with delayed repair and regeneration in the aging kidney. Here we discuss new progress in understanding renal aging, focusing on mechanisms of cell senescence and possible interventions to modulate age-related organ damage. | Publication | 20705707 (PMID) 10.1681/ASN.2010020205 (DOI) |
Fogo AB. PPARγ and chronic kidney disease. (2011) Pediatr Nephrol 26: 347-51 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPARγ) agonists, exemplified by the thiazolidinediones (TZDs), have been used extensively for their beneficial effects to improve insulin sensitivity and lipid metabolism in type 2 diabetic patients. PPARγ receptors are part of the steroid hormone nuclear receptor family and, when activated by agonist binding, can affect numerous target genes expressing PPAR response elements. Results from experimental studies and a limited number of studies in humans suggest that PPARγ agonists have manifold effects beyond those on dysmetabolic syndrome. These potentially beneficial actions are mediated via renal parenchymal and infiltrating cells and modulate fibrotic, inflammatory, immune, proliferative, reactive oxygen and mitochondrial injury pathways. Thus, the potential benefits of TZDs in chronic kidney disease impact numerous pathogenic pathways. This review will focus on evidence of the effects of TZDs in nondiabetic chronic kidney disease in experimental and human disease settings. | Publication | 20676693 (PMID) 10.1007/s00467-010-1602-2 (DOI) |
Fogo AB, Kon V. The glomerulus--a view from the inside--the endothelial cell. (2010) Int J Biochem Cell Biol 42: 1388-97 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012The glomerular endothelial cells are unique both in location and anatomy compared to most other endothelial cells throughout the body. The absence of a diaphragm with retention of a basement membrane and fenestrations enable these uniquely situated cells to have a key role in filtration performed by the kidney. Interaction with other glomerular cells such as the podocytes and mesangial cells, as well as with circulating and infiltrating inflammatory cells, contribute to the final impact of the glomerular endothelial cells on maintenance of body fluid homeostasis and modulation of disease. Thus, endothelial cells contribute to hemodynamic function, reactive oxygen stress, regulate the balance between pro-thrombotic and anti-thrombotic forces, and importantly, contribute to fibrosis, the key injury of progressive chronic kidney disease. Repair of endothelial cell damage and restoration of segmentally sclerosed glomeruli are key areas considered for intervention in chronic kidney disease. This review will focus on the structure, function, and interplay of endothelial cells with other glomerular cells and systemic factors, their impact on renal disease and give rationale for possible intervention that may forestall progressive injuries. | Publication | 20541032 (PMID) 10.1016/j.biocel.2010.05.015 (DOI) |
Yang HC, Deleuze S, Zuo Y, Potthoff SA, Ma LJ, Fogo AB. The PPARgamma agonist pioglitazone ameliorates aging-related progressive renal injury. (2009) J Am Soc Nephrol 20: 2380-8 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-gamma) agonists not only improve metabolic abnormalities of diabetes and consequent diabetic nephropathy, but they also protect against nondiabetic chronic kidney disease in experimental models. Here, we found that the PPAR-gamma agonist pioglitazone protected against renal injury in aging; it reduced proteinuria, improved GFR, decreased sclerosis, and alleviated cell senescence. Increased local expression of PPAR-gamma paralleled these changes. Underlying mechanisms included increased expression of klotho, decreased systemic and renal oxidative stress, and decreased mitochondrial injury. Pioglitazone also regulated p66(Shc) phosphorylation, which integrates many signaling pathways that affect mitochondrial function and longevity, by reducing protein kinase C-beta. These results suggest that PPAR-gamma agonists may benefit aging-related renal injury by improving mitochondrial function. | Publication | 19797472 (PMID) PMC2799181 (PMCID) 10.1681/ASN.2008111138 (DOI) |
Zuo Y, Yancey P, Castro I, Khan WN, Khan W, Motojima M, Ichikawa I, Fogo AB, Linton MF, Fazio S, Kon V. Renal dysfunction potentiates foam cell formation by repressing ABCA1. (2009) Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 29: 1277-82 Show Abstract · Added January 20, 2012Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have the highest risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD). Current interventions have been insufficiently effective in lessening excess incidence and mortality from CVD in CKD patients versus other high-risk groups. The mechanisms underlying the heightened risk remain obscure but may relate to differences in CKD-induced atherogenesis, including perturbation of macrophage cholesterol trafficking. | Publication | 19667109 (PMID) PMC2748735 (PMCID) 10.1161/ATVBAHA.109.188995 (DOI) |