Author:
Kitching A. Richard,Ru Huang Xiao,Turner Amanda L.,Tipping Peter G.,Dunn Ashley R.,Holdsworth Stephen R.
Abstract
ABSTRACT. Proliferative glomerulonephritis in humans is characterized by the presence of leukocytes in glomeruli. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) can potentially stimulate or affect T cell, macrophage, and neutrophil function. To define the roles of GM-CSF and G-CSF in leukocyte-mediated glomerulonephritis, glomerular injury was studied in mice genetically deficient in either GM-CSF (GM-CSF −/− mice) or G-CSF (G-CSF −/− mice). Two models of glomerulonephritis were studied: neutrophil-mediated heterologous-phase anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) glomerulonephritis and T cell/macrophage-mediated crescentic autologous-phase anti-GBM glomerulonephritis. Both GM-CSF −/− and G-CSF −/− mice were protected from heterologous-phase anti-GBM glomerulonephritis compared with genetically normal (CSF WT) mice, with reduced proteinuria and glomerular neutrophil numbers. However, only GM-CSF −/− mice were protected from crescentic glomerular injury in the autologous phase, whereas G-CSF −/− mice were not protected and in fact had increased numbers of T cells in glomeruli. Humoral responses to the nephritogenic antigen were unaltered by deficiency of either GM-CSF or G-CSF, but glomerular T cell and macrophage numbers, as well as dermal delayed-type hypersensitivity to the nephritogenic antigen, were reduced in GM-CSF −/− mice. These studies demonstrate that endogenous GM-CSF plays a role in experimental glomerulonephritis in both the autologous and heterologous phases of injury.
Publisher
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)
Subject
Nephrology,General Medicine
Cited by
69 articles.
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