4.5 Article

Altered lung metabolism and mitochondrial DAMPs in lung injury due to acute kidney injury

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00578.2020

Keywords

AKI; ARDS; metabolomics; mitochondria; mtDAMPs

Funding

  1. American Society of Nephrology Ben J. Lipps Fellowship Award
  2. American Thoracic Society
  3. NIH [R01 HL147326]
  4. UCSD [RS169R]
  5. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation [ZR2017MH075]
  6. UAB/UCSD O'Brien Core Center for Acute Kidney Injury Research [NIH P30 DK 079337]
  7. [R01 DK107852]
  8. [VA Merit BX002175]
  9. [VA CDA 2 IK2BX004338 01]

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Acute kidney injury has been shown to impact lung metabolism and lead to lung injury, with alterations in mitochondrial function and mtDAMPs correlating with these metabolic changes. Mitochondrial function and mtDAMPs are potential therapeutic targets in preventing lung injury due to AKI.
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a common cause of mortality in patients with acute kidney injury (AKI). Inflammatory crosstalk from the kidney to the lung has been shown to contribute to lung injury after AKI, but anti-inflammatory therapies have not been proven beneficial in human studies. Recently, AKI was shown to alter mitochondria and related metabolic pathways in the heart, but the impact of AKI on lung metabolism has not been investigated to our knowledge. In this study, we evaluated the metabolomic profile of the lung following renal ischemia and reperfusion to identify novel pathways that may be modifiable. We randomized C57BL/6 mice to 20 minutes of bilateral renal arterial clamping or sham operation under ketamine/xylazine anesthesia. At 4 hours after reperfusion, we found a significant increase in markers of lung injury, as well as significant metabolomic changes across lung, kidney, plasma and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) compared to shams. Comparative analyses revealed that the fatty acid oxidation pathway was the most significantly altered metabolic pathway, a finding which is consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction systemically and in the lung. These metabolomic changes correlated with the extracellular accumulation of the mitochondrial damage associated molecular patterns (mtDAMPs), mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and transcription factor A, mitochondria (TFAM). Finally, we found that intraperitoneal injection of renal mtDAMPs caused metabolomic changes consistent with mitochondria! dysfunction in the lung in vivo. Mitochondrial function and mtDAMPs warrant further investigation as potential therapeutic targets in preventing lung injury because of AKI.

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