| Literature DB >> 29545789 |
Nicolas S Merle1,2,3, Anne Grunenwald1,2,3, Marie-Lucile Figueres1,2,3, Sophie Chauvet1,2,3,4, Marie Daugan1,2,3, Samantha Knockaert1,2,3, Tania Robe-Rybkine1,2,3, Remi Noe1,2,3, Olivia May1,5,6, Marie Frimat5,6, Nathan Brinkman7, Thomas Gentinetta8, Sylvia Miescher8, Pascal Houillier1,2,3, Veronique Legros9, Florence Gonnet9, Olivier P Blanc-Brude3,10, Marion Rabant11, Regis Daniel9, Jordan D Dimitrov1,2,3, Lubka T Roumenina1,2,3.
Abstract
Intravascular erythrocyte destruction, accompanied by the release of pro-oxidative and pro-inflammatory components hemoglobin and heme, is a common event in the pathogenesis of numerous diseases with heterogeneous etiology and clinical features. A frequent adverse effect related to massive hemolysis is the renal injury and inflammation. Nevertheless, it is still unclear whether heme--a danger-associated molecular pattern--and ligand for TLR4 or upstream hemolysis-derived products are responsible for these effects. Well-characterized animal models of hemolysis with kidney impairment are needed to investigate how hemolysis drives kidney injury and to test novel therapeutic strategies. Here, we characterized the pathological processes leading to acute kidney injury and inflammation during massive intravascular hemolysis, using a mouse model of phenylhydrazine (PHZ)-triggered erythrocyte destruction. We observed profound changes in mRNA levels for markers of tubular damage (Kim-1, NGAL) and regeneration (indirect marker of tubular injury, Ki-67), and tissue and vascular inflammation (IL-6, E-selectin, P-selectin, ICAM-1) in kidneys of PHZ-treated mice, associated with ultrastructural signs of tubular injury. Moreover, mass spectrometry revealed presence of markers of tubular damage in urine, including meprin-α, cytoskeletal keratins, α-1-antitrypsin, and α-1-microglobulin. Signs of renal injury and inflammation rapidly resolved and the renal function was preserved, despite major changes in metabolic parameters of PHZ-injected animals. Mechanistically, renal alterations were largely heme-independent, since injection of free heme could not reproduce them, and scavenging heme with hemopexin in PHZ-administered mice could not prevent them. Reduced overall health status of the mice suggested multiorgan involvement. We detected amylasemia and amylasuria, two markers of acute pancreatitis. We also provide detailed characterization of renal manifestations associated with acute intravascular hemolysis, which may be mediated by hemolysis-derived products upstream of heme release. This analysis provides a platform for further investigations of hemolytic diseases and associated renal injury and the evaluation of novel therapeutic strategies that target intravascular hemolysis.Entities:
Keywords: endothelial activation; experimental model of intravascular hemolysis; heme; hemolysis; hemopexin; inflammation; kidney injury; phenylhydrazine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29545789 PMCID: PMC5839160 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Evaluation of the renal function parameters in the phenylhydrazine (PHZ) and heme-injected mice in metabolic cages. (A) Blood total hemoglobin, (B) plasma lactate, (C) plasma HCO3−, (D) blood glucose, (E) plasma sodium, (F) plasma potassium, (G) plasma calcium, (H) plasma creatinine, and (I) plasma urea. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001, and Kruskal–Wallis with Dunn’s test for multiple pairwise comparisons (A–G) or performed by two-way ANOVA with Tukey’s test for multiple pairwise comparisons (H,I). Kinetic evolutions of (J) urine volume, (K) water intake, (L) food intake, (M) excrements, (N) weight, and (O) proteinuria/creatininuria ratio. B1, B2, and B3 correspond to baseline measures three consecutive days before injection, and D1 and D2 correspond to mice follow-up two consecutive days after i.p. injection (for each measure, n ≥ 6 per group). ** p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001, and **** p < 0.0001 compared with PBS-treated mice, ## p < 0.005 and #### p < 0.0001 compared with heme-treated mice, and two-way ANOVA with Tukey’s test for multiple pairwise comparisons.
Figure 2Renal histology of phenylhydrazine (PHZ)-treated mice. (A) Representative images of kidneys from PBS- and PHZ-treated mice. (B) Fixed and paraffin-embedded kidneys from mouse sacrificed at day 4 were cut at 3 µm and stained with hematoxylin–eosin (×15). (C) Quantitative analysis of proximal tubular size; each point represents the size of one tubule (n = 200). Mean ± SD, ** p < 0,005, and Mann–Whitney test. (D,E) Fixed and paraffin-embedded kidneys (×20) from mice sacrificed at day 4 were cut at 3 µm and stained with PAS (D), Perl’s Prussian Blue (E). Black arrows point to tubules lumen (B), to glomerular mesangium (D), or to iron deposition (E) in PBS- and PHZ-treated mice.
Figure 3Hemolysis inducing renal injury. Kinetics of mRNA levels in renal tissue of (A) NGAL, (B) Kim-1, (C) Ki-67, (D) IL-6, (E) E-selectin, (F) P-selectin and (G) ICAM-1 at 1, 2, and 4 days after PBS or phenylhydrazine (PHZ) injection. (H) Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were incubated for 24 h with increased concentration of PHZ in M199 medium, containing 20% fetal calf serum, and cell death was measured by double staining with annexin-V and DAPI by flow cytometry. (I–K) HUVECs were incubated for 24 h with increased concentration of PHZ or TNF-α as a positive control, in M199 medium, containing 20% fetal calf serum. E-selectin (I), VCAM-1 (J), and ICAM-1 (K) were measured by flow cytometry. Data are presented for 0.312-mg/mL PHZ, gating on live (annexin-V−, DAPI− cells, about 80% of the total cell population). Mean ± SEM, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001, and Mann–Whitney test.
Figure 4The renal injury which is largely heme-independent. mRNA levels of NGAL (A), Kim-1 (B), and IL-6 (C) in renal tissue after injection of heme at day 2. Influence of hemopexin (Hx) on mRNA level in the phenylhydrazine (PHZ) model, (D) NGAL, (E) Kim-1, (F) IL-6, (G) E-selectin, (H) P-selectin, and (I) ICAM-1 at day 1 or day 4, as mentioned under the panels. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.005, Mann–Whitney test for (A–C), and Kruskal–Wallis with Dunn’s test for multiple pairwise comparisons for (D–I). Panels (A–C) compare genes expression after two injections of heme at day 0 and day 1. Panels (D,E) compare the genes expression at days 1 and 4 (D1 and D4) after injection of PHZ ± Hx. The remaining panels show results for D1 after injection of PHZ ± Hx.
Figure 5Heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) expression induced in tubular kidneys in response to hemolysis. (A) Kinetics of mRNA levels in renal tissue of HO-1 at days 1, 2, and 4. ** p < 0.005, *** p < 0.001, and Mann–Whitney test. (B) HO-1 expression at days 1 and 4 was not modulated by hemopexin (Hx); * p < 0.05, Kruskal–Wallis with Dunn’s test for multiple pairwise comparisons. (C) Immunohistochemistry analysis of frozen kidney sections of mice (×20), injected with phenylhydrazine (PHZ), heme, or with the vehicle only at day 2. The staining for HO-1 appears in brown and nuclei in blue. Representative images from one out of three or five mice per group (staining performed in three independent experiments).
Figure 6Phenylhydrazine (PHZ) triggered pancreatic α-amylase activity. (A) Proteinuria analysis by Coomassie blue staining of mice treated with PHZ, heme, or vehicle only. (B) Western blot analysis of α-amylase excreted in urines of mice treated with PHZ, heme, or vehicle only. (C) Comparison of α-amylase activity in urines from mice treated with PHZ or vehicle only. According to the manufacturer, urines were put in the presence of the substrate ethylidene-pNP-G7, which is cleaved in the presence of α-amylase, causing the release of a chromophore that can then be measured at OD = 405 nm.
Proteins, identified by mass spectrometry in each of the bands, excised from the gel of urinary electrophoresis.
| MW kDa | Heme | PHZ | PBS | BSA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Band 200 | Meprin A subunit alpha P28825 | Meprin A subunit alpha P28825 | Uromodulin Q91 × 17 | |
| Band 75 | Serum albumin P07724 | |||
| Band 70 | Uromodulin Q91 × 17 | Serotransferrin Q0921I1 | Serotransferrin Q0921I1 | |
| Band 65 | Serotransferrin Q0921I1 | |||
| Band 60 | Serum albumin P07724 | Serum albumin P07724 | Serum albumin P07724 | Serum albumin P02769 |
| Band 50–55 | Pancreatic alpha-amylase P00688 | Serum albumin P07724 | ||
| Band 40 | Pancreatic alpha-amylase P00688 | Serum albumin P07724 | ||
| Band 38 | Keratin, type-II cytoskeletal 79 Q8VED5 | |||
| Band 35 | Keratin, type-I cytoskeletal 42 Q6IFX2 | |||
| Band 25 | Kallikrein P15947 | Kallikrein P15947 | Kallikrein P15947 |
The numbers represent the UniProtKB ID of the protein.
PHZ, phenylhydrazine; BSA, bovine serum albumin; MW, molecular weight.