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p66Shc mediates high-glucose and angiotensin II-induced oxidative stress renal tubular injury via mitochondrial-dependent apoptotic pathway

Authors :
Jing Nie
Youming Peng
Xue Jing Zhu
Wen Cui Chen
Hong Liu
Lin Sun
Guang hui Ling
Wen Bin Tang
Yashpal S. Kanwar
Yun Cheng Xia
Fu You Liu
Li Xiao
Ming Ming Ma
Ying hong Liu
Ming Zhan
Source :
American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology. 299:F1014-F1025
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2010.

Abstract

p66Shc, a promoter of apoptosis, modulates oxidative stress response and cellular survival, but its role in the progression of diabetic nephropathy is relatively unknown. In this study, mechanisms by which p66Shc modulates high-glucose (HG)- or angiotensin (ANG) II-induced mitochondrial dysfunction were investigated in renal proximal tubular cells (HK-2 cells). Expression of p66Shc and its phosphorylated form (p-p66Shc, serine residue 36) and apoptosis were notably increased in renal tubules of diabetic mice, suggesting an increased reactive oxygen species production. In vitro, HG and ANG II led to an increased expression of total and p-p66Shc in HK-2 cells. These changes were accompanied with increased production of mitochondrial H2O2, reduced mitochondrial membrane potential, increased translocation of mitochondrial cytochrome c from mitochondria into cytosol, upregulation of the expression of caspase-9, and ultimately reduced cell survival. Overexpression of a dominant-negative Ser36 mutant p66Shc (p66ShcS36A) or treatment of p66Shc- or PKC-β-short interfering RNAs partially reversed these changes. Treatment of HK-2 cells with HG and ANG II also increased the protein-protein association between p-p66Shc and Pin1, an isomerase, in the cytosol, and with cytochrome c in the mitochondria. These interactions were partially disrupted with the treatment of PKC-β inhibitor or Pin1-short interfering RNA. These data suggest that p66Shc mediates HG- and ANG II-induced mitochondrial dysfunctions via PKC-β and Pin1-dependent pathways in renal tubular cells.

Details

ISSN :
15221466 and 1931857X
Volume :
299
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9ac7123e54914c30aa420e4daaf862d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00414.2010