| Literature DB >> 29490938 |
Eoin P Brennan1,2, Muthukumar Mohan1,3, Aaron McClelland1, Christos Tikellis1,3, Mark Ziemann1,4, Antony Kaspi1,4, Stephen P Gray1, Raelene Pickering1,3, Sih Min Tan1,3, Syed Tasadaque Ali-Shah5, Patrick J Guiry5, Assam El-Osta1,4, Karin Jandeleit-Dahm1,3, Mark E Cooper1,3, Catherine Godson2, Phillip Kantharidis6,3.
Abstract
Background The failure of spontaneous resolution underlies chronic inflammatory conditions, including microvascular complications of diabetes such as diabetic kidney disease. The identification of endogenously generated molecules that promote the physiologic resolution of inflammation suggests that these bioactions may have therapeutic potential in the context of chronic inflammation. Lipoxins (LXs) are lipid mediators that promote the resolution of inflammation.Methods We investigated the potential of LXA4 and a synthetic LX analog (Benzo-LXA4) as therapeutics in a murine model of diabetic kidney disease, ApoE-/- mice treated with streptozotocin.Results Intraperitoneal injection of LXs attenuated the development of diabetes-induced albuminuria, mesangial expansion, and collagen deposition. Notably, LXs administered 10 weeks after disease onset also attenuated established kidney disease, with evidence of preserved kidney function. Kidney transcriptome profiling defined a diabetic signature (725 genes; false discovery rate P≤0.05). Comparison of this murine gene signature with that of human diabetic kidney disease identified shared renal proinflammatory/profibrotic signals (TNF-α, IL-1β, NF-κB). In diabetic mice, we identified 20 and 51 transcripts regulated by LXA4 and Benzo-LXA4, respectively, and pathway analysis identified established (TGF-β1, PDGF, TNF-α, NF-κB) and novel (early growth response-1 [EGR-1]) networks activated in diabetes and regulated by LXs. In cultured human renal epithelial cells, treatment with LXs attenuated TNF-α-driven Egr-1 activation, and Egr-1 depletion prevented cellular responses to TGF-β1 and TNF-αConclusions These data demonstrate that LXs can reverse established diabetic complications and support a therapeutic paradigm to promote the resolution of inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic inflammation; diabetic nephropathy; kidney dysfunction; transcriptional profiling; transgenic mouse
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29490938 PMCID: PMC5967780 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2017101112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol ISSN: 1046-6673 Impact factor: 10.121