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Iron therapy mitigates chronic kidney disease progression by regulating intracellular iron status of kidney macrophages
Edwin Patino, Divya Bhatia, Steven Z. Vance, Ada Antypiuk, Rie Uni, Chantalle Campbell, Carlo G. Castillo, Shahd Jaouni, Francesca Vinchi, Mary E. Choi, Oleh Akchurin
Edwin Patino, Divya Bhatia, Steven Z. Vance, Ada Antypiuk, Rie Uni, Chantalle Campbell, Carlo G. Castillo, Shahd Jaouni, Francesca Vinchi, Mary E. Choi, Oleh Akchurin
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Research Article Nephrology

Iron therapy mitigates chronic kidney disease progression by regulating intracellular iron status of kidney macrophages

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Abstract

Systemic iron metabolism is disrupted in chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, little is known about local kidney iron homeostasis and its role in kidney fibrosis. Kidney-specific effects of iron therapy in CKD also remain elusive. Here, we elucidate the role of macrophage iron status in kidney fibrosis and demonstrate that it is a potential therapeutic target. In CKD, kidney macrophages exhibited depletion of labile iron pool (LIP) and induction of transferrin receptor 1, indicating intracellular iron deficiency. Low LIP in kidney macrophages was associated with their defective antioxidant response and proinflammatory polarization. Repletion of LIP in kidney macrophages through knockout of ferritin heavy chain (Fth1) reduced oxidative stress and mitigated fibrosis. Similar to Fth1 knockout, iron dextran therapy, through replenishing macrophage LIP, reduced oxidative stress, decreased the production of proinflammatory cytokines, and alleviated kidney fibrosis. Interestingly, iron markedly decreased TGF-β expression and suppressed TGF-β–driven fibrotic response of macrophages. Iron dextran therapy and FtH suppression had an additive protective effect against fibrosis. Adoptive transfer of iron-loaded macrophages alleviated kidney fibrosis, validating the protective effect of iron-replete macrophages in CKD. Thus, targeting intracellular iron deficiency of kidney macrophages in CKD can serve as a therapeutic opportunity to mitigate disease progression.

Authors

Edwin Patino, Divya Bhatia, Steven Z. Vance, Ada Antypiuk, Rie Uni, Chantalle Campbell, Carlo G. Castillo, Shahd Jaouni, Francesca Vinchi, Mary E. Choi, Oleh Akchurin

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Figure 6

Iron administration and renal antioxidant response in mice with CKD.

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Iron administration and renal antioxidant response in mice with CKD.
(A)...
(A) CKD was induced by a 0.2% adenine diet, and kidney tissues were processed for RNA sequencing. (B) Heatmap showing expression of top differentially expressed antioxidant genes in the kidneys of CTR mice, untreated CKD mice, and CKD mice that received weekly i.p. injections of iron dextran (CKD+Fe). Blue color represents low expression and red color high expression; *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001 for differences between CKD and CKD+Fe groups. (C) Expression of selected genes catalase and heme binding protein 1; n = 4 per group. (D) Schematic diagram of α-tocopherol (vitamin E), an antioxidant, administration in CKD mice. (E) α-Tocopherol administration did not change LIP and TfR1 expression in kidney macrophages but (F) reduced their ROS and (G) TNF-α expression and (H) improved serum creatinine. Error bars represent SEM. *P < 0.05. RPKM, reads per kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads.

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