| Literature DB >> 28387719 |
Wei-Yu Chen1, Lung-Chih Li2,3, Jenq-Lin Yang4.
Abstract
Renal diseases, including acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD), have a great impact on health care systems worldwide. Similar to cardiovascular diseases, renal diseases are inflammatory diseases involving a variety of cytokines. Primary causes of renal injury include ischemia, uremic toxins, bacteremia, or nephrotoxicity. Inflammation represents an important component following kidney injury. Interleukin (IL)-33 is a member of the IL-1 cytokine family, which is widely expressed in epithelial barrier tissues and endothelial cells, and mediates both tissue inflammation and repair responses. IL-33 is released as a nuclear alarmin in response to tissue damage and triggers innate and adaptive immune responses by binding to its receptor, suppression of tumorigenicity 2 (ST2). Recent evidence from clinical and experimental animal studies indicates that the IL-33/ST2 axis is involved in the pathogenesis of CKD, renal graft injury, systemic lupus nephritis, and AKI. In this review, we discuss the pathological and tissue reparative roles of the IL-33/ST2 pathway in different types of renal diseases.Entities:
Keywords: acute renal injury; chronic renal disease; inflammation; interleukin-33
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28387719 PMCID: PMC5412367 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18040783
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1IL-33/ST2 signaling in renal injury. (A) IL-33 binds to the receptor complex comprised of ST2L and IL-1RAcP on the cell membrane and induces recruitment of MyD88, IRAK1, IRAK4 and TRAF6, thereby activating the downstream NF-κB, JNK, p38, and ERK pathways. The extracellular soluble form of ST2 (sST2) binds IL-33 as a decoy receptor and has been postulated to be a biomarker in various inflammatory diseases; (B) Exogenous factors (such as drug toxicity, toxins, contrast agents, and chemotherapy), kidney transplantation, and diseases associated with nephropathies (SLE, renal ischemia, and diabetes) lead to upregulation of IL-33 in the renal tissues. Upon injury, necrotic epithelial cells, activated myofibroblasts, or endothelial cells release IL-33, triggering an inflammatory response and tissue repair processes by targeting the ST2-expressing cells.
Roles of IL-33 and ST2 in renal diseases.
| Kidney Diseases | Roles of IL-33/ST2 Axis | IL-33 Levels | sST2 Levels | Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic renal failure |
sST2 serum levels are elevated and associate with disease severity | (−) Serum | (↑) Serum | human | [ |
|
IL-33 serum levels are not correlated with disease severity | |||||
|
IL-33 levels are correlated with diabetes but not with renal injury | (−) Serum | human | [ | ||
| Diabetic nephritis |
ST2L expression is upregulated in human diabetic kidney tissues | (↑) Kidney mRNA | [ | ||
|
sST2 serum levels are increased in diabetes patients | (↑) Serum | human | [ | ||
|
sST2 serum levels are increased in type 1 diabetes patients | (↑) Serum | human | [ | ||
| Contrast-induced DN |
Serum and kidney IL-33 protein levels are elevated in contrast-induced diabetic nephropathy in rats | (↑) Kidney protein | rats | [ | |
| (↑) Serum | |||||
| Multiple myeloma patients with kidney failure |
IL-33 serum levels are higher in MM patients | (−) Serum | human | [ | |
|
No differences in IL-33 levels in MM patients with and without kidney failure | |||||
| Gout |
IL-33 serum levels are higher in gout patients | (↑) Serum | human | [ | |
|
IL-33 serum level negatively correlates with biomarkers of kidney injury | |||||
| Renal cell carcinoma |
IL-33 is associated with advanced tumor stage | (↑) Tissue | [ | ||
| SLE |
IL-33 serum levels are elevated in SLE patients | (↑) Serum | (↑) Serum | human mice | [ |
|
IL-33 inhibition by antibody reduces renal damages and inhibits SLE via expansion of Tregs and MDSC and inhibition of Th17 cells and pro-inflammatory responses | mice | [ | |||
|
sST2 but not IL-33 correlates with disease severity of SLE | (−) Serum | (↑) Serum | human | [ | |
| UUO |
Upregulation of IL-33, sST2, ST2L in obstructed kidney | (↑) Kidney mRNA | (↑) Kidney mRNA | mice | [ |
|
| (↑) Kidney Protein | ||||
| Ischemia/Reperfusion renal injury |
ILC2 and MPP type2 cells regulate macrophage phenotype in kidney and prevent acute renal ischemia/reperfusion injury | mice | [ | ||
| Renal Transplantation |
Increased serum and urine IL-33 and sST2 levels after renal transplantation | (↑) Urine | (↑) Urine | human | [ |
|
IL-33 activates iNKT cells after renal ischemia/reperfusion injury | (↑) Serum | (↑) Serum | |||
|
Serum IL-33 levels are significantly higher in chronic allograft dysfunction | (↑) Serum | human | [ | ||
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IL-33 levels are positively associated with high cardiovascular risk, diminished eGFR, age, diabetes, serum phosphorus and microalbuminurea for renal transplant recipients | (↑) Serum | human | [ | ||
|
sST2 serum levels are significantly increased after kidney transplantation | (↑) Serum | human | [ | ||
| GVHD |
sST2 is a biomarker for the development of GVHD and mortality | (↑) Serum | human | [ | |
|
Increased IL-33 production is found in nonhematopoietic cells in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract in patients during GVHD | (↑) Serum | mice | [ | ||
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ST2 blockade by a monoclonal antibody reduces sST2-producing T cells while maintaining protective ST2L-expressing T cells during GVHD | (↑) Serum | mice | [ | ||
|
peri-alloHCT administration of IL-33 expands IL-33-responsive Tregs in mouse models of acute GVHD | mice | [ | |||
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| |||||
| Cisplatin |
IL-33 protein is induced by cisplatin | (↑) Kidney protein | mice | [ | |
|
IL-33 exacerbates renal injury via activation CD4+ T cells/CXCL1 axis | (↑) Serum | ||||
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Neutralization of IL-33 by sST2 protects against cisplatin-induced AKI | |||||
| OVA |
Anti-IL-33 therapy reduces KIM-1, COX-2, iNOS, eNOS, and p-AMPK expressions in renal parenchyma. | mice | [ | ||
| Folic acid |
Inhibition of ferroptosis preserves renal function and prevents the upregulation of IL-33 in folic acid-induced AKI | (↑) Kidney protein | mice | [ | |
| (↑) Serum | |||||
| Paracetamol |
Upregulation of IL-33 by paracetamol | (↑) Kidney protein | rats | [ | |
| Adriamycin |
ST2+ ILC2s are a major ILC population in the human and mouse kidney | mice | [ | ||
|
Exogenous IL-33 ameliorates renal damage by expansion of ST2+ ILC2s | |||||
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| (↑) Kidney mRNA | (↑) Kidney mRNA | mice | [ |
|
| (↑) Liver mRNA | (↑) Liver mRNA | |||
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Exogenous IL-33 exacerbates disease and mortality during infection | |||||
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IL-33/IL-13 axis enhances fungal clearance by increasing the phagocytosis activity of neutrophils, polarization of M2 macrophages and renal functional recovery | mice | [ | ||
(↑) : upregulation; (↓): downregulation; (−): no change.