Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common clinical condition associated with diverse etiologies and abrupt loss of renal function. In patients with sepsis, rhabdomyolysis, cancer, and cardiovascular disorders, the underlying disease or associated therapeutic interventions can cause hypoxia, cytotoxicity, and inflammatory insults to renal tubular epithelial cells (RTECs), resulting in the onset of AKI. To uncover stress-responsive disease-modifying genes, here we have carried out renal transcriptome profiling in three distinct murine models of AKI. We find that nerve growth factor inducible gene up-regulation is a common transcriptional stress response in RTECs to ischemia-, cisplatin-, and rhabdomyolysis-associated renal injury. The gene encodes a secretory peptide precursor protein that has critical neuroendocrine functions; however, its role in the kidneys remains unknown. Our functional studies show that RTEC-specific gene ablation exacerbates ischemia-, cisplatin-, and rhabdomyolysis-associated AKI and cisplatin-induced RTEC cell death Importantly, aggravation of cisplatin-induced renal injury caused by gene ablation is partly reversed by TLQP-21, a Vgf-derived peptide. Finally, and mechanistic studies showed that injury-induced up-regulation in RTECs is driven by the transcriptional regulator Sox9. These findings reveal a crucial downstream target of the Sox9-directed transcriptional program and identify as a stress-responsive protective gene in kidney tubular epithelial cells.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7705303 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015110 | DOI Listing |
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