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Amino acid metabolism inhibits antibody-driven kidney injury by inducing autophagy.

Authors :
Chaudhary K
Shinde R
Liu H
Gnana-Prakasam JP
Veeranan-Karmegam R
Huang L
Ravishankar B
Bradley J
Kvirkvelia N
McMenamin M
Xiao W
Kleven D
Mellor AL
Madaio MP
McGaha TL
Source :
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) [J Immunol] 2015 Jun 15; Vol. 194 (12), pp. 5713-24. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 May 15.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Inflammatory kidney disease is a major clinical problem that can result in end-stage renal failure. In this article, we show that Ab-mediated inflammatory kidney injury and renal disease in a mouse nephrotoxic serum nephritis model was inhibited by amino acid metabolism and a protective autophagic response. The metabolic signal was driven by IFN-γ-mediated induction of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) enzyme activity with subsequent activation of a stress response dependent on the eIF2α kinase general control nonderepressible 2 (GCN2). Activation of GCN2 suppressed proinflammatory cytokine production in glomeruli and reduced macrophage recruitment to the kidney during the incipient stage of Ab-induced glomerular inflammation. Further, inhibition of autophagy or genetic ablation of Ido1 or Gcn2 converted Ab-induced, self-limiting nephritis to fatal end-stage renal disease. Conversely, increasing kidney IDO1 activity or treating mice with a GCN2 agonist induced autophagy and protected mice from nephritic kidney damage. Finally, kidney tissue from patients with Ab-driven nephropathy showed increased IDO1 abundance and stress gene expression. Thus, these findings support the hypothesis that the IDO-GCN2 pathway in glomerular stromal cells is a critical negative feedback mechanism that limits inflammatory renal pathologic changes by inducing autophagy.<br /> (Copyright © 2015 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1550-6606
Volume :
194
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25980011
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1500277