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54
result(s) for
"Bräsen, Jan Hinrich"
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Angiotensin II Type 1–Receptor Activating Antibodies in Renal-Allograft Rejection
by
Mazak, Istvan
,
Luft, Friedrich C
,
Neumayer, Hans-Hellmut
in
Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers - pharmacology
,
Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers - therapeutic use
,
Animals
2005
Although some kidney-transplant recipients with severe vascular rejection have antibodies against HLA antigens, others do not. Severe vascular rejection accompanied by accelerated hypertension, and even convulsions, resembles preeclampsia. Activating antibodies targeting the angiotensin II type 1 receptor have been found in preeclampsia, and the authors sought and detected such antibodies in patients with severe vascular rejection. These results suggest that a pathway mediated by a non-HLA, angiotensin II type 1 receptor may be involved in vascular rejection.
The results suggest that a pathway mediated by a non-HLA, angiotensin II type 1 receptor may be involved in vascular rejection.
Many aspects of T-cell–mediated responses in allograft rejection have been elucidated, yet humoral mechanisms are relatively unexplored. Vascular rejection that is refractory to intensified immunosuppression is the most important predictor of early and late graft loss.
1
The association of antidonor humoral reactivity against HLA antigens and vascular rejection has been established.
2
Other targets of the allograft-directed host response remain elusive. However, alloantibodies against the polymorphic non-HLA system were found in serum obtained before transplantation from patients in whom refractory rejection developed after they received kidney transplants from HLA-identical siblings.
3
Allograft endothelium may be a primary target of the cytopathic actions . . .
Journal Article
Renal tubular Fas ligand mediates fratricide in cisplatin-induced acute kidney failure
by
Krautwald, Stefan
,
Kunzendorf, Ulrich
,
Linkermann, Andreas
in
acute kidney injury
,
Acute Kidney Injury - chemically induced
,
Acute Kidney Injury - immunology
2011
Cisplatin, a standard chemotherapeutic agent for many tumors, has an unfortunately common toxicity where almost a third of patients develop renal dysfunction after a single dose. Acute kidney injury caused by cisplatin depends on Fas-mediated apoptosis driven by Fas ligand (FasL) expressed on tubular epithelial and infiltrating immune cells. Since the role of FasL in T cells is known, we investigated whether its presence in primary kidney cells is needed for its toxic effect. We found that all cisplatin-treated wild-type (wt) mice died within 6 days; however, severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)/beige mice (B-, T-, and natural killer-cell-deficient) displayed a significant survival benefit, with only 55% mortality while exhibiting significant renal failure. Treating SCID/beige mice with MFL3, a FasL-blocking monoclonal antibody, completely restored survival after an otherwise lethal cisplatin dose, suggesting another source of FasL besides immune cells. Freshly isolated primary tubule segments from wt mice were co-incubated with thick ascending limb (TAL) segments freshly isolated from mice expressing the green fluorescent protein (GFP) transgene (same genetic background) to determine whether FasL-mediated killing of tubular cells is an autocrine or paracrine mechanism. Cisplatin-stimulated primary segments induced apoptosis in the GFP-tagged TAL cells, an effect blocked by MFL3. Thus, our study shows that cisplatin-induced nephropathy is mediated through FasL, functionally expressed on tubular cells that are capable of inducing death of cells of adjacent tubules.
Journal Article
Synchronized renal tubular cell death involves ferroptosis
by
Dewitz, Christin
,
Weinberg, Joel M.
,
Krautwald, Stefan
in
Acute kidney injury
,
Animals
,
Apoptosis
2014
Significance Cell death by regulated necrosis causes tremendous tissue damage in a wide variety of diseases, including myocardial infarction, stroke, sepsis, and ischemia–reperfusion injury upon solid organ transplantation. Here, we demonstrate that an iron-dependent form of regulated necrosis, referred to as ferroptosis, mediates regulated necrosis and synchronized death of functional units in diverse organs upon ischemia and other stimuli, thereby triggering a detrimental immune response. We developed a novel third-generation inhibitor of ferroptosis that is the first compound in this class that is stable in plasma and liver microsomes and that demonstrates high efficacy when supplied alone or in combination therapy.
Receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (RIPK3)-mediated necroptosis is thought to be the pathophysiologically predominant pathway that leads to regulated necrosis of parenchymal cells in ischemia–reperfusion injury (IRI), and loss of either Fas-associated protein with death domain (FADD) or caspase-8 is known to sensitize tissues to undergo spontaneous necroptosis. Here, we demonstrate that renal tubules do not undergo sensitization to necroptosis upon genetic ablation of either FADD or caspase-8 and that the RIPK1 inhibitor necrostatin-1 (Nec-1) does not protect freshly isolated tubules from hypoxic injury. In contrast, iron-dependent ferroptosis directly causes synchronized necrosis of renal tubules, as demonstrated by intravital microscopy in models of IRI and oxalate crystal-induced acute kidney injury. To suppress ferroptosis in vivo, we generated a novel third-generation ferrostatin (termed 16-86), which we demonstrate to be more stable, to metabolism and plasma, and more potent, compared with the first-in-class compound ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1). Even in conditions with extraordinarily severe IRI, 16-86 exerts strong protection to an extent which has not previously allowed survival in any murine setting. In addition, 16-86 further potentiates the strong protective effect on IRI mediated by combination therapy with necrostatins and compounds that inhibit mitochondrial permeability transition. Renal tubules thus represent a tissue that is not sensitized to necroptosis by loss of FADD or caspase-8. Finally, ferroptosis mediates postischemic and toxic renal necrosis, which may be therapeutically targeted by ferrostatins and by combination therapy.
Journal Article
Two independent pathways of regulated necrosis mediate ischemia–reperfusion injury
2013
Regulated necrosis (RN) may result from cyclophilin (Cyp)D-mediated mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) and receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIPK)1-mediated necroptosis, but it is currently unclear whether there is one common pathway in which CypD and RIPK1 act in or whether separate RN pathways exist. Here, we demonstrate that necroptosis in ischemia–reperfusion injury (IRI) in mice occurs as primary organ damage, independent of the immune system, and that mice deficient for RIPK3, the essential downstream partner of RIPK1 in necroptosis, are protected from IRI. Protection of RIPK3-knockout mice was significantly stronger than of CypD-deficient mice. Mechanistically, in vivo analysis of cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury and hyperacute TNF-shock models in mice suggested the distinctness of CypD-mediated MPT from RIPK1/RIPK3-mediated necroptosis. We, therefore, generated CypD-RIPK3 double-deficient mice that are viable and fertile without an overt phenotype and that survived prolonged IRI, which was lethal to each single knockout. Combined application of the RIPK1 inhibitor necrostatin-1 and the MPT inhibitor sanglifehrin A confirmed the results with mutant mice. The data demonstrate the pathophysiological coexistence and corelevance of two separate pathways of RN in IRI and suggest that combination therapy targeting distinct RN pathways can be beneficial in the treatment of ischemic injury.
Journal Article
Cytotoxicity of crystals involves RIPK3-MLKL-mediated necroptosis
2016
Crystals cause injury in numerous disorders, and induce inflammation via the NLRP3 inflammasome, however, it remains unclear how crystals induce cell death. Here we report that crystals of calcium oxalate, monosodium urate, calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate and cystine trigger caspase-independent cell death in five different cell types, which is blocked by necrostatin-1. RNA interference for receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (RIPK3) or mixed lineage kinase domain like (MLKL), two core proteins of the necroptosis pathway, blocks crystal cytotoxicity. Consistent with this, deficiency of RIPK3 or MLKL prevents oxalate crystal-induced acute kidney injury. The related tissue inflammation drives TNF-α-related necroptosis. Also in human oxalate crystal-related acute kidney injury, dying tubular cells stain positive for phosphorylated MLKL. Furthermore, necrostatin-1 and necrosulfonamide, an inhibitor for human MLKL suppress crystal-induced cell death in human renal progenitor cells. Together, TNF-α/TNFR1, RIPK1, RIPK3 and MLKL are molecular targets to limit crystal-induced cytotoxicity, tissue injury and organ failure.
Kidney stone disease is caused by accumulation of oxalate crystals, which trigger tissue injury, inflammation and cell death. Mulay
et al
. show that crystals induce cell death in the kidney through necroptosis, and propose that this pathway may be a target for the treatment of crystal-induced disease.
Journal Article
Vitamin K1 inhibits ferroptosis and counteracts a detrimental effect of phenprocoumon in experimental acute kidney injury
by
Riebeling, Theresa
,
Krautwald, Stefan
,
Kunzendorf, Ulrich
in
acute kidney injury
,
antagonists
,
Apoptosis
2022
Ferroptosis, a type of iron-dependent programmed cell death distinct from apoptosis, necroptosis, and other types of cell death, is characterized by lipid peroxidation, reactive oxygen species production, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Accumulating evidence has highlighted vital roles for ferroptosis in multiple diseases, including acute kidney injury. Therefore, ferroptosis has become a major focus for translational research. However, despite its involvement in pathological conditions, there are no pharmacologic inhibitors of ferroptosis in clinical use. In the context of drug repurposing, a strategy for identifying new uses for approved drugs outside the original medical application, we discovered that vitamin K1 is an efficient inhibitor of ferroptosis. Our findings are strengthened by the fact that the vitamin K antagonist phenprocoumon significantly exacerbated ferroptotic cell death in vitro and also massively worsened the course of acute kidney injury in vivo, which is of utmost clinical importance. We therefore assign vitamin K1 a novel role in preventing ferroptotic cell death in acute tubular necrosis during acute kidney injury. Since the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of vitamin K1 formulations are well documented, this drug is primed for clinical application, and provides a new strategy for pharmacological control of ferroptosis and diseases associated with this mode of cell death.
Journal Article
The mTOR inhibitor Rapamycin protects from premature cellular senescence early after experimental kidney transplantation
by
Markmann, Denise
,
Thurn-Valassina, Daniela
,
Budde, Klemens
in
Animals
,
Atrophy
,
Atrophy - pathology
2022
Interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy, a major cause of kidney allograft dysfunction, has been linked to premature cellular senescence. The mTOR inhibitor Rapamycin protects from senescence in experimental models, but its antiproliferative properties have raised concern early after transplantation particularly at higher doses. Its effect on senescence has not been studied in kidney transplantation, yet. Rapamycin was applied to a rat kidney transplantation model (3 mg/kg bodyweight loading dose, 1.5 mg/kg bodyweight daily dose) for 7 days. Low Rapamycin trough levels (2.1–6.8 ng/mL) prevented the accumulation of p16 INK4a positive cells in tubules, interstitium, and glomerula. Expression of the cytokines MCP-1, IL-1β, and TNF-α, defining the proinflammatory senescence-associated secretory phenotype, was abrogated. Infiltration with monocytes/macrophages and CD8 + T-lymphocytes was reduced and tubular function was preserved by Rapamycin. Inhibition of mTOR was not associated with impaired structural recovery, higher glucose levels, or weight loss. mTOR inhibition with low-dose Rapamycin in the immediate posttransplant period protected from premature cellular senescence without negative effects on structural and functional recovery from preservation/reperfusion damage, glucose homeostasis, and growth in a rat kidney transplantation model. Reduced senescence might maintain the renal regenerative capacity rendering resilience to future injuries resulting in protection from interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy.
Journal Article
Genetic Engineering of the Kidney to Permanently Silence MHC Transcripts During ex vivo Organ Perfusion
by
Wedekind, Dirk
,
Rong, Song
,
Valdivia, Emilio
in
Animals
,
Antigens
,
beta 2-Microglobulin - genetics
2020
Organ gene therapy represents a promising tool to correct diseases or improve graft survival after transplantation. Polymorphic variation of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens remains a major obstacle to long-term graft survival after transplantation. Previously, we demonstrated that MHC-silenced cells are protected against allogeneic immune responses. We also showed the feasibility to silence MHC in the lung. Here, we aimed at the genetic engineering of the kidney toward permanent silencing of MHC antigens in a rat model. We constructed a sub-normothermic
perfusion system to deliver lentiviral vectors encoding shRNAs targeting β2-microglobulin and the class II transactivator to the kidney. In addition, the vector contained the sequence for a secreted nanoluciferase. After kidney transplantation (ktx), we detected bioluminescence in the plasma and urine of recipients of an engineered kidney during the 6 weeks of post-transplant monitoring, indicating a stable transgene expression. Remarkably, transcript levels of β2-microglobulin and the class II transactivator were decreased by 70% in kidneys expressing specific shRNAs. Kidney genetic modification did not cause additional cell death compared to control kidneys after machine perfusion. Nevertheless, cytokine secretion signatures were altered during perfusion with lentiviral vectors as revealed by an increase in the secretion of IL-10, MIP-1α, MIP-2, IP-10, and EGF and a decrease in the levels of IL-12, IL-17, MCP-1, and IFN-γ. Biodistribution assays indicate that the localization of the vector was restricted to the graft. This study shows the potential to generate immunologically invisible kidneys showing great promise to support graft survival after transplantation and may contribute to reduce the burden of immunosuppression.
Journal Article
Chromophobe renal cell carcinoma – a rare kidney cancer with limited therapy options: a narrative review
by
Serth, Jürgen
,
Pashai Fakhri, Milad
,
Kuczyk, Markus Antonius
in
Amino acids
,
Anopheles
,
Antigens
2025
Chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (chRCC) is a rare subtype of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and is the most common form of non-clear cell renal cell carcinoma in young women. Compared to clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), chRCC usually has an excellent prognosis, indicating the need for a reliable differential diagnosis, especially to distinguish it from eosinophilic variants of ccRCC. Another important differential diagnosis is renal oncocytoma (RO), which remains a major challenge even for experienced pathologists. The treatment of RO typically involves active surveillance, with surgical resection indicated if there is significant tumor growth. In contrast, for chRCC, the approach depends on tumor size, with either partial or radical nephrectomy being required. This review therefore summarizes key unique features and recent findings on this tumor, aiming to ensure a reliable differential diagnosis, thereby facilitating appropriate treatment selection and prognosis assessment. The histology of chRCC, including both for the classic and the eosinophilic subtype, is characterized by the appearance of raisinoid cell nuclei with perinuclear halos on microscopic imaging. In rare cases, signs of sarcomatoid, glandular and/or anaplastic dedifferentiation can also be observed, which significantly worsens the prognosis. The immunohistochemical marker phospho-S6 can be used to detect these changes. In addition to other routinely used markers such as C-Kit, CK7, EpCAM, CAIX and Claudin 7, we recommend the use of progesterone receptors as markers, as many chRCC express them and are thus progesterone-sensitive. This progesterone sensitivity could indicate that chRCC, similar to breast cancer, may represent a contraindication for the use of hormonal contraceptives. In addition to immunohistochemistry, molecular features of chRCC such as genetic, epigenetic, transcriptomic and proteomic alterations can be considered in the differential diagnosis. In this review, we therefore outline the most important established alterations in this context. In the treatment of metastatic chRCC, checkpoint inhibitors and tyrosine kinase inhibitors have demonstrated efficacy and may represent a promising new approach for managing dedifferentiated, aggressive or metastatic chRCC. This review aims to present recent therapeutic advances and provide innovative approaches for future clinical treatment decisions.
Journal Article