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Deficiency of CFB attenuates renal tubulointerstitial damage by inhibiting ceramide synthesis in diabetic kidney disease
Zi-jun Sun, Dong-yuan Chang, Min Chen, Ming-hui Zhao
Zi-jun Sun, Dong-yuan Chang, Min Chen, Ming-hui Zhao
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Research Article Immunology Nephrology

Deficiency of CFB attenuates renal tubulointerstitial damage by inhibiting ceramide synthesis in diabetic kidney disease

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Abstract

Accumulating evidence suggests the pathogenic role of immunity and metabolism in diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Herein, we aimed to investigate the effect of complement factor B (CFB) on lipid metabolism in the development of DKD. We found that in patients with diabetic nephropathy, the staining of Bb, CFB, C3a, C5a, and C5b-9 was markedly elevated in renal tubulointerstitium. Cfb-knockout diabetic mice had substantially milder tubulointerstitial injury and less ceramide biosynthesis. The in vitro study demonstrated that cytokine secretion, endoplasmic reticulum stress, oxidative stress, and cell apoptosis were ameliorated in HK-2 cells transfected with siRNA of CFB under high-glucose conditions. Exogenous ceramide supplementation attenuated the protective effect of CFB knockdown in HK-2 cells, while inhibiting ceramide synthases (CERS) with fumonisin B1 in CFB-overexpressing cells rescued the cell injury. CFB knockdown could downregulate the expression of NF-κB p65, which initiates the transcription of CERS3. Furthermore, C3 knockdown abolished CFB-mediated cytokine secretion, NF-κB signaling activation, and subsequently ceramide biosynthesis. Thus, CFB deficiency inhibited activation of the complement alternative pathway and attenuated kidney damage in DKD, especially tubulointerstitial injury, by inhibiting the NF-κB signaling pathway, further blocking the transcription of CERS, which regulates the biosynthesis of ceramide. CFB may be a promising therapeutic target of DKD.

Authors

Zi-jun Sun, Dong-yuan Chang, Min Chen, Ming-hui Zhao

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Figure 3

The process of ceramide biosynthesis was downregulated in Cfb-deficient diabetic mice.

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The process of ceramide biosynthesis was downregulated in Cfb-deficient ...
PCA was conducted with gene expression level to illustrate the distribution and repeatability of each sample; n = 4 for diabetic groups, n = 3 for nondiabetic groups (A). The number of common and unique DEGs was analyzed (B). We used a volcano map to present the upregulated or downregulated genes between Cfb–/– diabetic mice and WT diabetic mice (C). Compared with WT diabetic mice, GO enrichment was conducted with the top 30 terms of downregulated categories of Cfb–/– diabetic mice (D). GSEA of transcriptomics was conducted from Cfb–/– diabetic mice compared with WT diabetic mice. This targeted GSEA of sphingolipid synthesis signaling was performed in addition to and separately from a comprehensive transcriptomics analysis (E). RT-qPCR was used to measure and verify the mRNA expression of Cers in the kidney cortex of mice; n = 6 for diabetic groups, n = 8 for nondiabetic groups (F–H). Untargeted lipidomics and the quantification of ceramide were performed to illustrate the downregulated ceramide biosynthesis in Cfb–/– diabetic mice; n = 6/group (I and J). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01 between groups was determined by 1-way ANOVA. Cers, ceramide synthases; GSEA, gene set enrichment analysis; PCA, principal component analysis; RT-qPCR, quantitative real-time PCR; WT, wild-type.

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