Literature DB >> 16251406

Conditional ablation of macrophages halts progression of crescentic glomerulonephritis.

Jeremy S Duffield1, Peter G Tipping, Tiina Kipari, Jean-François Cailhier, Spike Clay, Richard Lang, Joseph V Bonventre, Jeremy Hughes.   

Abstract

The presence of macrophages in inflamed glomeruli of rat kidney correlates with proliferation and apoptosis of resident glomerular mesangial cells. We assessed the contribution of inflammatory macrophages to progressive renal injury in murine crescentic glomerulonephritis (GN). Using a novel transgenic mouse (CD11b-DTR) in which tissue macrophages can be specifically and selectively ablated by minute injections of diphtheria toxin, we depleted renal inflammatory macrophages through days 15 and 20 of progressive crescentic GN. Macrophage depletion reduced the number of glomerular crescents, improved renal function, and reduced proteinuria. Morphometric analysis of renal tubules and interstitium revealed a marked attenuation of tubular injury that was associated with reduced proliferation and apoptosis of tubular cells. The population of interstitial myofibroblasts decreased after macrophage depletion and interstitial fibrosis also decreased. In the presence of macrophages, interstitial myofibroblasts exhibited increased levels of both proliferation and apoptosis, suggesting that macrophages act to support a population of renal myofibroblasts in a high turnover state and in matrix deposition. Finally, deletion of macrophages reduced CD4 T cells in the diseased kidney. This study demonstrates that macrophages are key effectors of disease progression in crescentic GN, acting to regulate parenchymal cell populations by modulating both cell proliferation and apoptosis.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16251406      PMCID: PMC1603796          DOI: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)61209-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  58 in total

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8.  Conditional macrophage ablation demonstrates that resident macrophages initiate acute peritoneal inflammation.

Authors:  Jean Francois Cailhier; Marina Partolina; Srilatha Vuthoori; Shengji Wu; Kyung Ko; Simon Watson; John Savill; Jeremy Hughes; Richard A Lang
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2005-02-15       Impact factor: 5.422

9.  Local macrophage proliferation in human glomerulonephritis.

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Authors:  G Diez-Roux; M Argilla; H Makarenkova; K Ko; R A Lang
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  106 in total

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6.  Targeting endothelium-pericyte cross talk by inhibiting VEGF receptor signaling attenuates kidney microvascular rarefaction and fibrosis.

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Review 7.  Host responses in tissue repair and fibrosis.

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9.  Macrophage A2A Adenosine Receptors Are Essential to Protect from Progressive Kidney Injury.

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