4.6 Article

RIPK3-Mediated Necroptosis Promotes Donor Kidney Inflammatory Injury and Reduces Allograft Survival

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages 2805-2818

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.12447

Keywords

Inflammation; HMGB1; kidney allograft survival; kidney IRI; necroptosis; RIPK3

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [XTW-90932, MOP-111180, MOP-115048]
  2. Kidney Foundation of Canada
  3. Program of Experimental Medicine (POEM) at LHSC

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Kidney transplant injury occurs with ischemia and alloimmunity. Members of the receptor interacting protein kinase family (RIPK1,3) are key regulators of necroptosis, a newly recognized, regulated form of necrosis. Necroptosis and apoptosis death appear to be counterbalanced as caspase-8 inhibition can divert death from apoptosis to necrosis. Inhibition of necroptosis in donor organs to limit injury has not been studied in transplant models. In this study, necroptosis was triggered in caspase inhibited tubular epithelial cells (TEC) exposed to tumor necrosis factor alpha in vitro, while RIPK1 inhibition with necrostatin-1 or use of RIPK3(-/-) TEC, prevented necroptosis. In vivo, short hairpin RNA silencing of caspase-8 in donor B6 mouse kidneys increased necroptosis, enhanced high-mobility group box 1 release, reduced renal function and accelerated rejection when transplanted into BALB/c recipients. Using ethidium homodimer perfusion to assess necrosis in vivo, necrosis was abrogated in RIPK3(-/-) kidneys postischemia. Following transplantation, recipients receiving RIPK3(-/-) kidneys had longer survival (p=0.002) and improved renal function (p=0.03) when compared to controls. In summary, we show for the first time that RIPK3-mediated necroptosis in donor kidneys can promote inflammatory injury, and has a major impact on renal ischemia-reperfusion injury and transplant survival. We suggest inhibition of necroptosis in donor organs may similarly provide a major clinical benefit. Inhibition of donor kidney receptor-interacting protein kinase-mediated necroptosis reduces inflammatory injury and prolongs allograft survival. See editorial by Mannon on page 2785 and minireview by Linkermann et al on page 2797.

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