Neutrophil-Macrophage Imbalance Drives the Development of Renal Scarring during Experimental Pyelonephritis

Author:

Ruiz-Rosado Juan de Dios,Robledo-Avila FrankORCID,Cortado Hanna,Rangel-Moreno Javier,Justice Sheryl S.ORCID,Yang ChingORCID,Spencer John David,Becknell Brian,Partida-Sanchez SantiagoORCID

Abstract

BackgroundIn children, the acute pyelonephritis that can result from urinary tract infections (UTIs), which commonly ascend from the bladder to the kidney, is a growing concern because it poses a risk of renal scarring and irreversible loss of kidney function. To date, the cellular mechanisms underlying acute pyelonephritis–driven renal scarring remain unknown.MethodsWe used a preclinical model of uropathogenic Escherichia coli–induced acute pyelonephritis to determine the contribution of neutrophils and monocytes to resolution of the condition and the subsequent development of kidney fibrosis. We used cell-specific monoclonal antibodies to eliminate neutrophils, monocytes, or both. Bacterial ascent and the cell dynamics of phagocytic cells were assessed by biophotonic imaging and flow cytometry, respectively. We used quantitative RT-PCR and histopathologic analyses to evaluate inflammation and renal scarring.ResultsWe found that neutrophils are critical to control bacterial ascent, which is in line with previous studies suggesting a protective role for neutrophils during a UTI, whereas monocyte-derived macrophages orchestrate a strong, but ineffective, inflammatory response against uropathogenic, E. coli–induced, acute pyelonephritis. Experimental neutropenia during acute pyelonephritis resulted in a compensatory increase in the number of monocytes and heightened macrophage-dependent inflammation in the kidney. Exacerbated macrophage-mediated inflammatory responses promoted renal scarring and compromised renal function, as indicated by elevated serum creatinine, BUN, and potassium.ConclusionsThese findings reveal a previously unappreciated outcome for neutrophil-macrophage imbalance in promoting host susceptibility to acute pyelonephritis and the development of permanent renal damage. This suggests targeting dysregulated macrophage responses might be a therapeutic tool to prevent renal scarring during acute pyelonephritis.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Therapeutics

American Association of Immunologists

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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