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Abstract
Tubulointerstitial fibrosis is the final common pathway to end-stage renal disease.
Understanding the mechanisms of tubulointerstitial fibrosis is essential in establishing
novel therapeutic strategies for the prevention or arrest of progressive kidney diseases.
The present review focuses on a newly proposed mechanism of tubulointerstitial fibrosis,
one that emphasizes the roles of epithelial-mesenchymal transition and cellular activation.
Among the cells that accumulate in the renal interstitium, fibroblasts are the principal
effectors mediating tubulointerstitial fibrosis. By contrast, the phagocytosis of
extracellular matrix and apoptotic cells by macrophages may actually exert a beneficial
effect. Interstitial fibroblasts are more heterogeneous than expected, and during
renal fibrosis new fibroblasts are derived mainly through epithelial-mesenchymal transition.
The intracellular signaling pathways leading to initiation of epithelial-mesenchymal
transition remain largely unknown, though recent studies have identified beta-catenin
and Smad3 activation of lymphoid enhancer factor, integrin-linked kinase, and small
GTPases and mitogen-activated protein kinases as key components. Transforming growth
factor-beta is believed to be a critical fibrogenic factor, but recent studies have
also focused on transforming growth factor-beta independent pathways as mechanisms
of tubulointerstitial fibrosis. As the mechanisms underlying tubulointerstitial fibrosis
leading to epithelial-mesenchymal transition have been identified, so have cytokines
that efficiently antagonize renal fibrosis, particularly bone morphogenic protein-7
and hepatocyte growth factor.
In combination with traditional angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, newly identified
cytokines may eventually form the basis for new therapeutic strategies aimed at inhibiting
the progression of renal disease.
Bone morphogenic protein (BMP)-7 is a 35-kDa homodimeric protein and a member of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta superfamily. BMP-7 expression is highest in the kidney, and its genetic deletion in mice leads to severe impairment of eye, skeletal and kidney development. Here we report that BMP-7 reverses TGF-beta1-induced epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) by reinduction of E-cadherin, a key epithelial cell adhesion molecule. Additionally, we provide molecular evidence for Smad-dependent reversal of TGF-beta1-induced EMT by BMP-7 in renal tubular epithelial cells and mammary ductal epithelial cells. In the kidney, EMT-induced accumulation of myofibroblasts and subsequent tubular atrophy are considered key determinants of renal fibrosis during chronic renal injury. We therefore tested the potential of BMP-7 to reverse TGF-beta1-induced de novo EMT in a mouse model of chronic renal injury. Our results show that systemic administration of recombinant human BMP-7 leads to repair of severely damaged renal tubular epithelial cells, in association with reversal of chronic renal injury. Collectively, these results provide evidence of cross talk between BMP-7 and TGF-beta1 in the regulation of EMT in health and disease.
We performed subtractive and differential hybridization for transcript comparison between murine fibroblasts and isogenic epithelium, and observed only a few novel intracellular genes which were relatively specific for fibroblasts. One such gene encodes a filament-associated, calcium-binding protein, fibroblast-specific protein 1 (FSP1). The promoter/enhancer region driving this gene is active in fibroblasts but not in epithelium, mesangial cells or embryonic endoderm. During development, FSP1 is first detected by in situ hybridization after day 8.5 as a postgastrulation event, and is associated with cells of mesenchymal origin or of fibroblastic phenotype. Polyclonal antiserum raised to recombinant FSP1 protein stained the cytoplasm of fibroblasts, but not epithelium. Only occasional cells stain with specific anti-FSP1 antibodies in normal parenchymal tissue. However, in kidneys fibrosing from persistent inflammation, many fibroblasts could be identified in interstitial sites of collagen deposition and also in tubular epithelium adjacent to the inflammatory process. This pattern of anti-FSP1 staining during tissue fibrosis suggests, as a hypothesis, that fibroblasts in some cases arise, as needed, from the local conversion of epithelium. Consistent with this notion that FSP1 may be involved in the transition from epithelium to fibroblasts are experiments in which the in vitro overexpression of FSP1 cDNA in tubular epithelium is accompanied by conversion to a mesenchymal phenotype, as characterized by a more stellate and elongated fibroblast- like appearance, a reduction in cytokeratin, and new expression of vimentin. Similarly, tubular epithelium submerged in type I collagen gels exhibited the conversion to a fibroblast phenotype which includes de novo expression of FSP1 and vimentin. Use of the FSP1 marker, therefore, should further facilitate both the in vivo studies of fibrogenesis and the mapping of cell fate among fibroblasts.
Snail is a transcription repressor that plays a central role in the epithelium-mesenchyme transition (EMT), by which epithelial cells lose their polarity. Claudins and occludin are integral membrane proteins localized at tight junctions, which are responsible for establishing and maintaining epithelial cell polarity. We examined the relationship between Snail and the promoter activity of claudins and occludin. When Snail was overexpressed in cultured mouse epithelial cells, EMT was induced with concomitant repression of the expression of claudins and occludin not only at the protein but also at the mRNA level. We then isolated the promoters of genes encoding claudins and occludin, in which multiple E-boxes were identified. Transfection experiments with various promoter constructs as well as electrophoretic mobility assays revealed that Snail binds directly to the E-boxes of the promoters of claudin/occludin genes, resulting in complete repression of their promoter activity. Because the gene encoding E-cadherin was also reported to be repressed by Snail, we concluded that EMT was associated with the simultaneous repression of the genes encoding E-cadherin and claudins/occludin (i.e. the expression of adherens and tight junction adhesion molecules, respectively).
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