(Pro)renin receptor mediates albumin-induced cellular responses: role of site-1 protease-derived soluble (pro)renin receptor in renal epithelial cells

Author:

Fang Hui1,Xu Chuanming12,Lu Aihua1,Zou Chang-Jiang2,Xie Shiying1,Chen Yanting1,Zhou Li1,Liu Mi1,Wang Lei1,Wang Weidong1,Yang Tianxin12

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Hypertension, Sun Yat-sen University School of Medicine, Guangzhou, China

2. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Salt Lake City, Utah

Abstract

Proteinuria is a characteristic of chronic kidney disease and also a causative factor that promotes the disease progression, in part, via activation of the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system (RAS). (Pro)renin receptor (PRR), a newly discovered component of the RAS, binds renin and (pro)renin to promote angiotensin I generation. The present study was performed to test the role of soluble PRR (sPRR) in albumin overload-induced responses in cultured human renal proximal tubular cell line human kidney 2 (HK-2) cells. Bovine serum albmuin (BSA) treatment for 24 h at 20 mg/ml induced renin activity and inflammation, both of which were attenuated by a PRR decoy inhibitor PRO20. BSA treatment induced a more than fivefold increase in medium sPRR due to enhanced cleavage of PRR. Surprisingly, this cleavage event was unaffected by inhibition of furin or a disintegrin and metalloproteinase 19. Screening for a novel cleavage enzyme led to the identification of site-1 protease (S1P). Inhibition of S1P with PF-429242 or siRNA remarkably suppressed BSA-induced sPRR production, renin activity, and inflammatory response. Administration of a recombinant sPRR, termed sPRR-His, reversed the effects of S1P inhibition. In HK-2 cells overexpressing PRR, mutagenesis of the S1P, but not furin cleavage site, reduced sPRR levels. Together, these results suggest that PRR mediates albumin-induced cellular responses through S1P-derived sPRR.

Funder

National Science Foundation of China

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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