Hepatocyte Growth Factor Prevents the Development of Chronic Allograft Nephropathy in Rats

Author:

AZUMA HARUHITO,TAKAHARA SHIRO,MATSUMOTO KUNIO,ICHIMARU NAOTSUGU,WANG JING DING,MORIYAMA TOSHIKI,WAAGA ANA-MARIA,KITAMURA MASAYA,OTSUKI YOSHINORI,OKUYAMA AKIHIKO,KATSUOKA YOJI,CHANDRAKER ANIL,SAYEGH MOHAMED H.,NAKAMURA TOSHIKAZU

Abstract

Abstract. Long-term renal isografts in humans and laboratory animals exhibit features similar to those of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN), indicating that antigen-independent factors, such as acute renal ischemia, are likely to be involved in the development of CAN. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) has been demonstrated to play a renotropic role in renal regeneration and protection from acute ischemic injury. This study was thus conducted to investigate the effect of HGF on the development of CAN, using an established rat model. HGF was administered daily (100 μg/d, intravenously) for 4 wk after engraftment. Control animals received saline solution. Allografts from control animals exhibited early evidence of severe structural collapse and necrotic cell death in the proximal tubules and outer medulla, with mononuclear cell infiltration, within 1 wk after engraftment. This was followed by sequential upregulation of adhesion molecules and cytokines, accompanied by dense macrophage infiltration. Fibrogenic events, as indicated by marked increases in transforming growth factor-β1 expression and the accumulation of smooth muscle α-actin, occurred during the same period. Control animals ultimately developed features typical of CAN, with functional deterioration and severe histologic changes; a survival rate of 50.6% by 32 wk was observed. In contrast, remarkably little early injury and no late fibrogenic events were observed for the HGF-treated group. All treated animals survived, with well preserved graft function, during the 32-wk follow-up period. These results indicate that renal protection and recovery from early allograft injury with HGF treatment greatly contribute to a reduction of susceptibility to the subsequent development of CAN in a rat model. The potential application of HGF in the prevention of CAN warrants further attention.

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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