Cytokine cooperation in renal tubular cell injury: The role of TWEAK (original) (raw)

Soluble Fn14 Is Detected and Elevated in Mouse and Human Kidney Disease

PloS one, 2016

The cytokine TWEAK and its cognate receptor Fn14 are members of the TNF/TNFR superfamily and are upregulated in tissue injury to mediate local tissue responses including inflammation and tissue remodeling. We found that in various models of kidney disease, Fn14 expression (mRNA and protein) is upregulated in the kidney. These models include: lupus nephritis mouse models (Nephrotoxic serum Transfer Nephritis and MRL.Faslpr/lpr), acute kidney injury models (Ischemia reperfusion injury and Folic acid injury), and a ZSF-1 diabetic nephropathy rat model. Fn14 expression levels correlate with disease severity as measured by disease histology. We have also shown for the first time the detection of soluble Fn14 (sFn14) in the urine and serum of mice. Importantly, we found the sFn14 levels are markedly increased in the diseased mice and are correlated with disease biomarkers including proteinuria and MCP-1. We have also detected sFn14 in human plasma and urine. Moreover, sFn14 levels, in uri...

The cytokine TWEAK modulates renal tubulointerstitial inflammation

Journal of the …, 2008

TNF-like weak inducer of apoptosis (TWEAK) is a member of the TNF superfamily of cytokines. In addition to binding and activating the fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 receptor, TWEAK may regulate apoptosis, proliferation, and inflammation; however, the role of this system in kidney injury is unknown. In vitro, it was found that TWEAK induced the sustained activation of NF-B in a murine tubular epithelial cell line (MCT). NF-B activation was associated with degradation of IB-␣; translocation of RelA to the nucleus; and increased mRNA and protein expression of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, RANTES, and IL-6. Similarly, in vivo, the systemic administration of TWEAK induced renal NF-B activation, chemokine and IL-6 expression, and interstitial inflammation in mice. Parthenolide, which prevents IB-␣ degradation, inhibited TWEAK-induced NF-B activation and prevented the aforementioned changes in vitro and in vivo. After folic acid-induced acute kidney injury, fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 expression increased in mouse tubular epithelium. Neutralization of TWEAK decreased the expression of chemokines in tubular cells and reduced interstitial inflammation. In conclusion, TWEAK has NF-Bdependent proinflammatory effects on tubular epithelial cells in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, blockade of TWEAK reduces tubular chemokine expression and macrophage infiltration, suggesting that TWEAK modulates acute kidney injury by regulating the inflammatory response.

Tumour necrosis factor-like weak inducer of apoptosis (TWEAK) in kidney disease: a biomarker or therapeutic target?

Pediatria i Medycyna Rodzinna

Kidney disease is a significant public health problem that is increasing worldwide. Tumour necrosis factor superfamily molecules have recently been shown to be actively involved in renal pathophysiology. According to current reports, one of these molecules has significant clinical implications: TWEAK, a tumour necrosis factor-like weak inducer of apoptosis. TWEAK is a cytokine with important functions. By binding to induced fibroblast growth factor 14 (Fn14), its only receptor, TWEAK activates various biological processes, including cell growth, migration or death, angiogenesis and production of proinflammatory cytokines. TWEAK and Fn14 expression is relatively low in healthy tissues. Experimental studies have confirmed the important role of TWEAK/Fn14 pathway activation in physiological tissue repair and regeneration, while its excessive activation leads to acute and/or chronic damage. TWEAK production takes place in various inflammatory diseases of the kidneys with the participati...

K 14 promotes acute kidney injury

2016

An improved understanding of pathogenic pathways may identify novel acute kidney injury (AKI) therapeutic approaches. Unbiased LC-MS/MS protein expression profiling combined with focused data mining identified MAP3K14 and non-canonical NFκB activation at the crossroads of the enriched pathways MAPK, ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, chemokines, NFκB and apoptosis in the kidney cortex of experimental toxic AKI. In AKI the upstream kinase MAP3K14, the NFκB DNA binding heterodimer RelB/NFκB2, and proteins involved in NFκB2 p100 ubiquitination and proteasomal processing to p52, such as Ube2m and cullin1 were up-regulated. Immunohistochemistry localized MAP3K14 expression to tubular cells in experimental and human AKI. In vivo evidence of MAP3K14 activation in experimental folic acid-induced AKI consisted of NFκB2 p100 processing to p52, nuclear location and DNA binding of RelB and NFκB2. MAP3K14 activity-deficient aly/aly mice were protected from kidney dysfunction, inflammation and apoptosis in AKI induced by folic acid and from lethality in cisplatin-induced AKI. MAP3K14 siRNA targeting in cultured tubular cells decreased inflammation and cell death. Bone marrow transplantation experiments where consistent with a protective effect of renal cell MAP3K14 targeting. Cell culture and in vivo studies identified chemokines MCP-1, RANTES and CXCL10 as MAP3K14 targets in tubular cells, thus identifying potential mediators of the deleterious effect of MAP3K14 in kidney injury. In conclusion, MAP3K14 promotes kidney injury through promotion of inflammation and cell death and is a promising novel therapeutic target.

The TWEAK/Fn14 pathway is required for Calcineurin Inhibitor Toxicity of the Kidneys

American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, 2017

Calcineurin inhibitor toxicity (CNT) is a frequent occurrence in transplanted renal grafts and autochthone kidneys from patients undergoing long-term treatment with Calcineurin inhibitors, notably Cyclosporin A (CsA) and Tacrolimus. Here, we show an indispensable role of the TNF superfamily molecule TWEAK (TNFSF12) in the pathogenesis of acute CNT lesions in mice. A deficiency in TWEAK resulted in limited tubulotoxicity after CsA exposure, which correlated with diminished expression of inflammatory cytokines and reduced intraparenchymal infiltration with immune cells. We further identified tubular epithelial cells of the kidney as major targets of CsA activity and found that Fn14 (TNFRSF12A), the receptor for TWEAK, is a highly CsA-inducible gene in these cells. Correlating with this, CsA pretreatment sensitized tubular epithelial cells specifically to the pro-inflammatory activities of recombinant TWEAK in vitro. Moreover, injection of rTWEAK alone into mice induced moderate diseas...

Fn14 in podocytes and proteinuric kidney disease

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 2013

Non-proliferative proteinuric diseases are the most common primary glomerular disorders causing end-stage renal disease. These disorders may associate low level glomerular inflammation and podocyte expression of inflammatory mediators. However, the factors regulating podocyte expression of inflammatory mediators in vivo in non-immune disorders are poorly understood. We have now explored the regulation and role of TWEAK receptor Fn14 in mediating glomerular inflammation in cultured podocytes and in experimental and human non-immune proteinuria. Transcriptomics disclosed Fn14 and MCP-1 mRNA upregulation in glomeruli from patients with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, as well as a correlation between the expression of both transcripts. Increased glomerular Fn14 and MCP-1 mRNA was confirmed in a second focal segmental glomerulosclerosis cohort and was also observed in membranous nephropathy. In human non-proliferative proteinuric kidney diseases podocytes displayed Fn14 and MCP-1 expression and NFκB activation. Podocyte Fn14 was increased in murine protein overload-induced proteinuria. In Fn14 knockout mice with protein overload-induced proteinuria, glomerular and periglomerular macrophage infiltrates were reduced, as were MCP-1 mRNA and podocyte MCP-1 staining and podocyte numbers preserved as compared to wild-type counterparts. Adenovirus-mediated overexpression of TWEAK increased periglomerular macrophage infiltration in mice without prior kidney injury. In cultured podocytes inflammatory cytokines increased Fn14 mRNA and protein levels. TWEAK activated NFκB and increased MCP-1 mRNA and protein, an effect prevented by the NFκB inhibitor parthenolide. In conclusion, Fn14 activation results in NFκB-mediated pro-inflammatory effects on podocytes that may be relevant for the pathogenesis of nonproliferative proteinuric kidney disease of non-immune origin.