4.8 Article

Kallikrein genes are associated with lupus and glomerular basement membrane-specific antibody-induced nephritis in mice and humans

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 119, Issue 4, Pages 911-923

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI36728

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Alliance for Lupus Research
  2. NIH [R01 AR50812]
  3. Swedish Research Council [12673]
  4. Torsten och Ragnar Soder-bergs stiftelser
  5. Gustaf V 80-Year jubilee Foundation
  6. National Arthritis Foundation
  7. Swedish Association Against Rheumatism
  8. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
  9. Spanish Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia [SAF2006-00398]
  10. Regione Piemonte [2003, 2004]

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Immune-mediated nephritis contributes to disease in systemic lupus erythematosus, Goodpasture syndrome (caused by antibodies specific for glomerular basement membrane [anti-GBM antibodies]), and spontaneous lupus nephritis. Inbred mouse strains differ in susceptibility to anti-GBM antibody-induced and spontaneous lupus nephritis. This study sought to clarify the genetic and molecular factors that may be responsible for enhanced immune-mediated renal disease in these models. When the kidneys of 3 mouse strains sensitive to anti-GBM antibody-induced nephritis were compared with those of 2 control strains using microarray analysis, one-fifth of the underexpressed genes belonged to the kallikrein gene family, which encodes serine esterases. Mouse strains that upregulated renal and urinary kallikreins exhibited less evidence of disease. Antagonizing the kallikrein pathway augmented disease, while agonists dampened the severity of anti-GBM antibody-induced nephritis. In addition, nephritis-sensitive mouse strains had kallikrein haplotypes that were distinct from those of control strains, including several regulatory polymorphisms, some of which were associated with functional consequences. Indeed, increased susceptibility to anti-GBM antibody-induced nephritis and spontaneous lupus nephritis was achieved by breeding mice with a genetic interval harboring the kallikrein genes onto a disease-resistant background. Finally, both human SLE and spontaneous lupus nephritis were found to be associated with kallikrein genes, particularly KLK1 and the KLK3 promoter, when DNA SNPs from independent cohorts of SLE patients and controls were compared. Collectively, these studies suggest that kallikreins are protective disease-associated genes in anti-GBM antibody-induced nephritis and lupus.

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