Activation of the Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor in Muscle Exacerbates Ischemic Pathology in Chronic Kidney Disease

Author:

Balestrieri Nicholas1ORCID,Palzkill Victoria1,Pass Caroline1,Tan Jianna1,Salyers Zachary R.1,Moparthy Chatick1,Murillo Ania1,Kim Kyoungrae1ORCID,Thome Trace1,Yang Qingping1,O’Malley Kerri A.2,Berceli Scott A.2,Yue Feng34,Scali Salvatore T.2ORCID,Ferreira Leonardo F.154ORCID,Ryan Terence E.154ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology (N.B., V.P., C.P., J.T., Z.R.S., C.M., A.M., K.K., T.T., Q.Y., L.F.F., T.E.R.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

2. Department of Surgery (K.A.O., S.A.B., S.T.S.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

3. Department of Animal Sciences (F.Y.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

4. Myology Institute (F.Y., L.F.F., T.E.R.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

5. Center for Exercise Science (L.F.F., T.E.R.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

Abstract

Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) accelerates the development of atherosclerosis, decreases muscle function, and increases the risk of amputation or death in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). However, the mechanisms underlying this pathobiology are ill-defined. Recent work has indicated that tryptophan-derived uremic solutes, which are ligands for AHR (aryl hydrocarbon receptor), are associated with limb amputation in PAD. Herein, we examined the role of AHR activation in the myopathy of PAD and CKD. Methods: AHR-related gene expression was evaluated in skeletal muscle obtained from mice and human PAD patients with and without CKD. AHR mKO (skeletal muscle–specific AHR knockout) mice with and without CKD were subjected to femoral artery ligation, and a battery of assessments were performed to evaluate vascular, muscle, and mitochondrial health. Single-nuclei RNA sequencing was performed to explore intercellular communication. Expression of the constitutively active AHR was used to isolate the role of AHR in mice without CKD. Results: PAD patients and mice with CKD displayed significantly higher mRNA expression of classical AHR-dependent genes ( Cyp1a1 , Cyp1b1 , and Aldh3a1 ) when compared with either muscle from the PAD condition with normal renal function ( P <0.05 for all 3 genes) or nonischemic controls. AHR mKO significantly improved limb perfusion recovery and arteriogenesis, preserved vasculogenic paracrine signaling from myofibers, increased muscle mass and strength, as well as enhanced mitochondrial function in an experimental model of PAD/CKD. Moreover, viral-mediated skeletal muscle–specific expression of a constitutively active AHR in mice with normal kidney function exacerbated the ischemic myopathy evidenced by smaller muscle masses, reduced contractile function, histopathology, altered vasculogenic signaling, and lower mitochondrial respiratory function. Conclusions: These findings establish AHR activation in muscle as a pivotal regulator of the ischemic limb pathology in CKD. Further, the totality of the results provides support for testing of clinical interventions that diminish AHR signaling in these conditions.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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