Deficiency of the angiotensinase aminopeptidase A increases susceptibility to glomerular injury

JCQ Velez, E Arif, J Rodgers, MP Hicks… - Journal of the …, 2017 - journals.lww.com
JCQ Velez, E Arif, J Rodgers, MP Hicks, JM Arthur, D Nihalani, ET Bruner, MN Budisavljevic…
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2017journals.lww.com
Aminopeptidase A (APA) is expressed in glomerular podocytes and tubular epithelia and
metabolizes angiotensin II (AngII), a peptide known to promote glomerulosclerosis. In this
study, we tested whether APA expression changes in response to progressive nephron loss
or whether APA exerts a protective role against glomerular damage and during AngII-
mediated hypertensive kidney injury. At advanced stages of FSGS, fawn-hooded
hypertensive rat kidneys exhibited distinctly increased APA staining in areas of intact …
Abstract
Aminopeptidase A (APA) is expressed in glomerular podocytes and tubular epithelia and metabolizes angiotensin II (AngII), a peptide known to promote glomerulosclerosis. In this study, we tested whether APA expression changes in response to progressive nephron loss or whether APA exerts a protective role against glomerular damage and during AngII-mediated hypertensive kidney injury. At advanced stages of FSGS, fawn-hooded hypertensive rat kidneys exhibited distinctly increased APA staining in areas of intact glomerular capillary loops. Moreover, BALB/c APA-knockout (KO) mice injected with a nephrotoxic serum showed persistent glomerular hyalinosis and albuminuria 96 hours after injection, whereas wild-type controls achieved virtually full recovery. We then tested the effect of 4-week infusion of AngII (400 ng/kg per minute) in APA-KO and wild-type mice. Although we observed no significant difference in achieved systolic BP, AngII-treated APA-KO mice developed a significant rise in albuminuria not observed in AngII-treated wild-type mice along with increased segmental and global sclerosis and/or collapse of juxtamedullary glomeruli, microcystic tubular dilation, and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. In parallel, AngII treatment significantly increased the kidney AngII content and attenuated the expression of podocyte nephrin in APA-KO mice but not in wild-type controls. These data show that deficiency of APA increases susceptibility to glomerular injury in BALB/c mice. The augmented AngII-mediated kidney injury observed in association with increased intrarenal AngII accumulation in the absence of APA suggests a protective metabolizing role of APA in AngII-mediated glomerular diseases.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins