High Glucose-Induced Kidney Injury via Activation of Necroptosis in Diabetic Kidney Disease

Author:

Guo Man12ORCID,Chen Qing12ORCID,Huang Yongli3ORCID,Wu Qi4ORCID,Zeng Yan125ORCID,Tan Xiaozhen12ORCID,Teng Fangyuan12ORCID,Ma Xiumei125ORCID,Pu Yueli12ORCID,Huang Wei12ORCID,Gu Junling6ORCID,Zhang Chunxiang7ORCID,Long Yang28ORCID,Xu Yong125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

2. Metabolic Vascular Disease Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

3. Department of Outpatient, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

4. Department of Pathology, and Academician Workstation of Sichuan Province, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

5. Faculty of Chinese Medicine, Macau University of Science and Technology, Avenida Wai Long, Macau, China

6. Department of Endocrinology, Yibin Second People’s Hospital, Yibin 644000, China

7. Institute of Cardiovascular Research, Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

8. Experimental Medicine Center, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou 646000, China

Abstract

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a major microvascular complication of diabetes mellitus (DM) and is closely associated to programmed cell death. However, the complex mechanisms of necroptosis, an alternative cell death pathway, in DKD pathogenesis are yet to be elucidated. This study indicates that necroptosis is involved in DKD induced by high glucose (HG) both in vivo and in vitro. HG intervention led to the activation of RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL signaling, resulting in renal tissue necroptosis and proinflammatory activation in streptozotocin/high-fat diet- (STZ/HFD-) induced diabetic mice and HG-induced normal rat kidney tubular cells (NRK-52E). We further found that in HG-induced NRK-52E cell, necroptosis might, at least partly, depend on the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Meanwhile, ROS participated in necroptosis via a positive feedback loop involving the RIPK1/RIPK3 pathway. In addition, blocking RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL signaling by necrostatin-1 (Nec-1), a key inhibitor of RIPK1 in the necroptosis pathway, or antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC), an inhibitor of ROS generation, could effectively protect the kidney against HG-induced damage, decrease the release of proinflammatory cytokines, and rescue renal function in STZ/HFD-induced diabetic mice. Inhibition of RIPK1 effectively decreased the activation of RIPK1-kinase-/NF-κB-dependent inflammation. Collectively, we demonstrated that high glucose induced DKD via renal tubular epithelium necroptosis, and Nec-1 or NAC treatment downregulated the RIPK1/RIPK3/MLKL pathway and finally reduced necroptosis, oxidative stress, and inflammation. Thus, RIPK1 may be a therapeutic target for DKD.

Funder

Southwest Medical University

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging,General Medicine,Biochemistry

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