Soluble thrombomodulin reduces inflammation and prevents microalbuminuria induced by chronic endothelial activation in transgenic mice

Author:

Rajashekhar Gangaraju123,Gupta Akanksha4,Marin Abby12,Friedrich Jessica2,Willuweit Antje5,Berg David T.4,Cramer Martin S.4,Sandusky George E.16,Sutton Timothy A.7,Basile David P.2,Grinnell Brian W.4,Clauss Matthias12

Affiliation:

1. Indiana Center for Vascular Biology and Medicine and

2. Departments of 2Cellular and Integrative Physiology,

3. Ophthalmology,

4. Biotechnology Discovery Research, Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Indiana; and

5. Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Bad Nauheim, Germany

6. Pathology, and

7. Nephrology, Indiana University School of Medicine, and

Abstract

Chronic kidney disease pathogenesis involves both tubular and vascular injuries. Despite abundant investigations to identify the risk factors, the involvement of chronic endothelial dysfunction in developing nephropathies is insufficiently explored. Previously, soluble thrombomodulin (sTM), a cofactor in the activation of protein C, has been shown to protect endothelial function in models of acute kidney injury. In this study, the role for sTM in treating chronic kidney disease was explored by employing a mouse model of chronic vascular activation using endothelial-specific TNF-α-expressing (tie2-TNF) mice. Analysis of kidneys from these mice after 3 mo showed no apparent phenotype, whereas 6-mo-old mice demonstrated infiltration of CD45-positive leukocytes accompanied by upregulated gene expression of inflammatory chemokines, markers of kidney injury, and albuminuria. Intervention with murine sTM with biweekly subcutaneous injections during this window of disease development between months 3 and 6 prevented the development of kidney pathology. To better understand the mechanisms of these findings, we determined whether sTM could also prevent chronic endothelial cell activation in vitro. Indeed, treatment with sTM normalized increased chemokines, adhesion molecule expression, and reduced transmigration of monocytes in continuously activated TNF-expressing endothelial cells. Our results suggest that vascular inflammation associated with vulnerable endothelium can contribute to loss in renal function as suggested by the tie2-TNF mice, a unique model for studying the role of vascular activation and inflammation in chronic kidney disease. Furthermore, the ability to restore the endothelial balance by exogenous administration of sTM via downregulation of specific adhesion molecules and chemokines suggests a potential for therapeutic intervention in kidney disease associated with chronic inflammation.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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