Cellular communication network 2 (connective tissue growth factor) aggravates acute DNA damage and subsequent DNA damage response-senescence-fibrosis following kidney ischemia reperfusion injury
Valentijn, Floris A; Knoppert, Sebastiaan N; Marquez-Exposito, Laura; Rodrigues-Diez, Raúl R; Pissas, Georgios; Tang, Jiaqi; Tejedor-Santamaria, Lucia; Broekhuizen, Roel; Samarakoon, Rohan; Eleftheriadis, Theodoros; Goldschmeding, Roel; Nguyen, Tri Q; Ruiz-Ortega, Marta; Falke, Lucas L
(2022) Kidney International, volume 102, issue 6, pp. 1305 - 1319
(Article)
Abstract
Chronic allograft dysfunction with progressive fibrosis of unknown cause remains a major issue after kidney transplantation, characterized by ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). One hypothesis to account for this is that spontaneous progressive tubulointerstitial fibrosis following IRI is driven by cellular senescence evolving from a prolonged, unresolved DNA damage response (DDR). Since
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cellular communication network factor 2 ((CCN2), formerly called connective tissue growth factor), an established mediator of kidney fibrosis, is also involved in senescence-associated pathways, we investigated the relation between CCN2 and cellular senescence following kidney transplantation. Tubular CCN2 overexpression was found to be associated with DDR, loss of kidney function and tubulointerstitial fibrosis in both the early and the late phase in human kidney allograft biopsies. Consistently, CCN2 deficient mice developed reduced senescence and tubulointerstitial fibrosis in the late phase; six weeks after experimental IRI. Moreover, tubular DDR markers and plasma urea were less elevated in CCN2 knockout than in wild-type mice. Finally, CCN2 administration or overexpression in epithelial cells induced upregulation of tubular senescence-associated genes including p21, while silencing of CCN2 alleviated DDR induced by anoxia-reoxygenation injury in cultured proximal tubule epithelial cells. Thus, our observations indicate that inhibition of CCN2 can mitigate IRI-induced acute kidney injury, DNA damage, and the subsequent DDR-senescence-fibrosis sequence. Hence, targeting CCN2 might help to protect the kidney from transplantation-associated post-IRI chronic kidney dysfunction.
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Keywords: DNA damage response, cellular communication network factor 2, cellular senescence, chronic kidney disease, ischemia-reperfusion injury, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, Nephrology
ISSN: 0085-2538
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Note: Funding Information: FAV reported grants from University Medical Center Utrecht, during the conduct of the study. LLF reported grants from the Dutch Kidney Foundation, during the conduct of the study (Kolff Grant 17OKG20). RS reported grants from the Capital Region Medical Research Institute, during the conduct of the study. TQN and RG reported grants from the Dutch Kidney Foundation, during the conduct of the study (Consortium Grant CP1805 “TASKFORCE”). All other authors declared no competing interests. Funding Information: FAV is sponsored by and work was performed with a UMC Utrecht Alexandre Suerman stipend. LLF is sponsored by and work was performed with a Dutch Kidney Foundation Kolff-grant (17OKG20). We are grateful for the generation of CCN2 condition knockout mice by Andrew Leask (Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 International Society of Nephrology
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