4.7 Article

Parathyroid hormone-related protein promotes inflammation in the kidney with an obstructed ureter

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 73, Issue 7, Pages 835-847

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/sj.ki.5002775

Keywords

inflammation; mice; obstructive nephropathy; PTHrP; renal tubuloepithelial cells

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Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) promotes fibrogenesis in the acutely damaged kidney. Considering the relation between fibrosis and inflammation, we studied transgenic mice that overexpress PTHrP in the proximal tubule. When unilateral ureteric obstruction was induced in these transgenic mice, we found that they had more renal tubulointerstitial damage, leukocyte influx, and expression of proinflammatory factors than their control littermates. Reversal of PTHrP constitutive overexpression in these transgenic mice or treatment of control mice with the PTHrP antagonist (7-34) decreased this inflammatory response. Losartan, which abolished obstruction-induced endogenous PTHrP upregulation, also decreased the latter response but less effectively in transgenic mice. The PTHrP fragment (1-36) induced nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) activation and proinflammatory cytokine overexpression in mouse cortical tubule cells in culture as well as migration of the macrophage cell line Raw 264.7. All these effects were decreased by PTHrP (7-34) and NF-kappa B or extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activation inhibitors. Our findings suggest a critical role of PTHrP in the renal inflammatory process that results from ureteral obstruction and indicate that ERK-mediated NF-kappa B activation seems to be an important mechanism whereby PTHrP triggers renal inflammation.

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