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ADAM17 substrate release in proximal tubule drives kidney fibrosis
Eirini Kefaloyianni, … , Joseph V. Bonventre, Andreas Herrlich
Eirini Kefaloyianni, … , Joseph V. Bonventre, Andreas Herrlich
Published August 18, 2016
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2016;1(13):e87023. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.87023.
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Research Article Cell biology Nephrology

ADAM17 substrate release in proximal tubule drives kidney fibrosis

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Abstract

Kidney fibrosis following kidney injury is an unresolved health problem and causes significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. In a study into its molecular mechanism, we identified essential causative features. Acute or chronic kidney injury causes sustained elevation of a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17 (ADAM17); of its cleavage-activated proligand substrates, in particular of pro-TNFα and the EGFR ligand amphiregulin (pro-AREG); and of the substrates’ receptors. As a consequence, EGFR is persistently activated and triggers the synthesis and release of proinflammatory and profibrotic factors, resulting in macrophage/neutrophil ingress and fibrosis. ADAM17 hypomorphic mice, specific ADAM17 inhibitor–treated WT mice, or mice with inducible KO of ADAM17 in proximal tubule (Slc34a1-Cre) were significantly protected against these effects. In vitro, in proximal tubule cells, we show that AREG has unique profibrotic actions that are potentiated by TNFα-induced AREG cleavage. In vivo, in acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD, fibrosis) patients, soluble AREG is indeed highly upregulated in human urine, and both ADAM17 and AREG expression show strong positive correlation with fibrosis markers in related kidney biopsies. Our results indicate that targeting of the ADAM17 pathway represents a therapeutic target for human kidney fibrosis.

Authors

Eirini Kefaloyianni, Muthu Lakshmi Muthu, Jakob Kaeppler, Xiaoming Sun, Venkata Sabbisetti, Athena Chalaris, Stefan Rose-John, Eitan Wong, Irit Sagi, Sushrut S. Waikar, Helmut Rennke, Benjamin D. Humphreys, Joseph V. Bonventre, Andreas Herrlich

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Figure 9

Mechanisms of injury-induced ADAM17-dependent sustained EGFR activation in proximal tubule cells.

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Mechanisms of injury-induced ADAM17-dependent sustained EGFR activation ...
Injury drives upregulation of ADAM17 and of its substrates, in particular pro-AREG. Increased ADAM17 activity on the cell surface leads to enhanced release of soluble AREG and TNFα, which activate their respective receptors. In a positive feedback loop, AREG-mediated EGFR activation increases ADAM17 and AREG expression. TNFα-mediated TNFR activation strengthens this feedback loop further by enhancing soluble AREG release (pathway crosstalk). Both pathways, AREG/EGFR and TNFα/TNFR, potentiate each other in inducing profibrotic and proinflammatory cytokines that drive kidney fibrosis. pro-TNFα, transmembrane pro–tumor necrosis factor α; sTNFα, soluble tumor necrosis factor α; ADAM17, a disintegrin and metalloprotease 17; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; pro-AREG, proamphiregulin; sAREG, soluble amphiregulin; TNFR, tumor necrosis factor receptor; MCP1, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1.

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