An AKI biomarker lipocalin 2 in the blood derives from the kidney in renal injury but from neutrophils in normal and infected conditions

J Kanda, K Mori, H Kawabata, T Kuwabara… - Clinical and …, 2015 - Springer
J Kanda, K Mori, H Kawabata, T Kuwabara, KP Mori, H Imamaki, M Kasahara, H Yokoi…
Clinical and experimental nephrology, 2015Springer
Background Lipocalin 2 (LCN2 or neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin) is a secretory
protein discovered from neutrophils, which accumulates in the blood and urine during acute
kidney injury (AKI) and in the blood by bacterial infection. Little is known about the tissue
source and molecular forms of this protein under normal and pathophysiologic conditions.
Methods By sandwich ELISA, serum and urinary LCN2 levels were measured in 36 patients
with hematologic malignancies who transiently became neutropenic by stem cell …
Background
Lipocalin 2 (LCN2 or neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin) is a secretory protein discovered from neutrophils, which accumulates in the blood and urine during acute kidney injury (AKI) and in the blood by bacterial infection. Little is known about the tissue source and molecular forms of this protein under normal and pathophysiologic conditions.
Methods
By sandwich ELISA, serum and urinary LCN2 levels were measured in 36 patients with hematologic malignancies who transiently became neutropenic by stem cell transplantation (SCT). To evaluate contribution of neutrophil-derived LCN2 in the physiologic blood LCN2 concentrations, we examined CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein ε (C/EBPε) knockout mice, which lack mature neutrophils.
Results
In patients without AKI and bacterial infection, at 1 week after SCT, the median blood neutrophil counts became zero and serum LCN2 levels were decreased by 76 ± 6 % (p < 0.01), but urinary LCN2 levels were not altered. During neutropenic conditions, bacterial infection caused only a modest rise of serum LCN2 but AKI produced a marked rise of serum and urinary LCN2 levels. Serum LCN2 concentrations in C/EBPε knockout mice were reduced by 66 ± 11 % compared to wild-type mice (p < 0.05). Blood LCN2 existed predominantly in high molecular weight forms (>100 kDa), while urinary LCN2 was mainly in low molecular weight forms.
Conclusion
Our findings suggest that neutrophils are the major source of circulating LCN2 in normal and infected conditions, whereas blood and urinary LCN2 mainly derive from the kidney during AKI, and that the molecular forms and regulation of blood and urinary LCN2 are clearly distinct.
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