| Literature DB >> 31405732 |
Naijun Miao1, Fan Yin1, Hongyan Xie1, Yanzhe Wang2, Yiang Xu1, Yang Shen1, Dan Xu1, Jianyong Yin3, Bao Wang1, Zhuanli Zhou1, Qian Cheng1, Panpan Chen1, Hong Xue1, Li Zhou1, Jun Liu1, Xiaoxia Wang4, Wei Zhang5, Limin Lu6.
Abstract
Inflammation and tubular cell death are the hallmarks of acute kidney injury. However, the precise mechanism underlying these effects has not been fully elucidated. Here we tested whether caspase-11, an inflammatory member of the caspase family, was increased in cisplatin or ischemia-reperfusion-induced acute kidney injury. Caspase-11 knockout mice after cisplatin treatment exhibited attenuated deterioration of renal functional, reduced tubular damage, reduced macrophage and neutrophil infiltration, and decreased urinary IL-18 excretion. Mechanistically, the upregulation of caspase-11 by either cisplatin or ischemia-reperfusion cleaved gasdermin D (GSDMD) into GSDMD-N, which translocated onto the plasma membrane, thus triggering cell pyroptosis and facilitated IL-18 release in primary cultured renal tubular cells. These results were further confirmed in GSDMD knockout mice that cisplatin-induced renal morphological and functional deterioration as well as urinary IL-18 excretion were alleviated. Furthermore, deficiency of GSDMD significantly suppressed cisplatin-induced IL-18 release but not the transcription and maturation level of IL-18 in tubular cells. Thus, our study indicates that caspase-11/GSDMD dependent tubule cell pyroptosis plays a significant role in initiating tubular cell damage, urinary IL-18 excretion and renal functional deterioration in acute kidney injury.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; caspase-11; gasdermin D; interleukin-18
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31405732 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2019.04.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612