Department of Biomedical Sciences (L.C.V., E.A.B., D.C., Z.K., K.E.B., J.F.G.), Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA.
Department of Pathology, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA (D.O.-D.).
Circ Res. 2022 Jun 24;131(1):59-73. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.320239. Epub 2022 May 16.
Chronic renal inflammation has been widely recognized as a major promoter of several forms of high blood pressure including salt-sensitive hypertension. In diabetes, IL (interleukin)-6 induces salt sensitivity through a dysregulation of the epithelial sodium channel. However, the origin of this inflammatory process and the molecular events that culminates with an abnormal regulation of epithelial sodium channel and salt sensitivity in diabetes are largely unknown.
Both in vitro and in vivo approaches were used to investigate the molecular and cellular contributors to the renal inflammation associated with diabetic kidney disease and how these inflammatory components interact to develop salt sensitivity in db/db mice.
Thirty-four-week-old db/db mice display significantly higher levels of IL-1β in renal tubules compared with nondiabetic db/+ mice. Specific suppression of IL-1β in renal tubules prevented salt sensitivity in db/db mice. A primary culture of renal tubular epithelial cells from wild-type mice releases significant levels of IL-1β when exposed to a high glucose environment. Coculture of tubular epithelial cells and bone marrow-derived macrophages revealed that tubular epithelial cell-derived IL-1β promotes the polarization of macrophages towards a proinflammatory phenotype resulting in IL-6 secretion. To evaluate whether macrophages are the cellular target of IL-1β in vivo, diabetic db/db mice were transplanted with the bone marrow of IL-1R1 (IL-1 receptor type 1) knockout mice. db/db mice harboring an IL-1 receptor type 1 knockout bone marrow remained salt resistant, display lower renal inflammation and lower expression and activity of epithelial sodium channel compared with db/db transplanted with a wild-type bone marrow.
Renal tubular epithelial cell-derived IL-1β polarizes renal macrophages towards a proinflammatory phenotype that promotes salt sensitivity through the accumulation of renal IL-6. When tubular IL-1β synthesis is suppressed or in db/db mice in which immune cells lack the IL-1R1, macrophage polarization is blunted resulting in no salt-sensitive hypertension.
慢性肾炎症已被广泛认为是多种形式高血压的主要促进因素,包括盐敏感性高血压。在糖尿病中,IL(白细胞介素)-6 通过上皮钠通道的失调诱导盐敏感性。然而,这种炎症过程的起源以及导致糖尿病中上皮钠通道和盐敏感性异常调节的分子事件在很大程度上仍是未知的。
使用体外和体内方法研究与糖尿病肾病相关的肾炎症的分子和细胞贡献物,以及这些炎症成分如何相互作用以在 db/db 小鼠中发展盐敏感性。
34 周龄的 db/db 小鼠的肾脏小管中 IL-1β 水平明显高于非糖尿病 db/+ 小鼠。在肾脏小管中特异性抑制 IL-1β 可防止 db/db 小鼠发生盐敏感性。来自野生型小鼠的肾脏管状上皮细胞的原代培养物在暴露于高葡萄糖环境时会释放出大量的 IL-1β。管状上皮细胞和骨髓来源的巨噬细胞共培养表明,管状上皮细胞衍生的 IL-1β 促进巨噬细胞向促炎表型极化,导致 IL-6 分泌。为了评估巨噬细胞是否是体内 IL-1β 的细胞靶标,将 IL-1R1(IL-1 受体类型 1)敲除小鼠的骨髓移植到糖尿病 db/db 小鼠中。携带 IL-1 受体类型 1 敲除骨髓的 db/db 小鼠保持盐抵抗,表现出较低的肾脏炎症和较低的上皮钠通道表达和活性,与移植野生型骨髓的 db/db 小鼠相比。
肾脏管状上皮细胞衍生的 IL-1β 使肾脏巨噬细胞向促炎表型极化,通过肾脏 IL-6 的积累促进盐敏感性。当管状 IL-1β 合成被抑制或在缺乏 IL-1R1 的免疫细胞的 db/db 小鼠中,巨噬细胞极化被削弱,导致没有盐敏感性高血压。