Signaling through the interleukin-18 receptor α attenuates inflammation in cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury.

Kidney International(2012)

Cited 52|Views5
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Abstract
Interleukin (IL)-18 is produced by leukocytes and renal parenchymal cells (tubular epithelial cells, podocytes, and mesangial cells). The IL-18 receptor (IL-18R) is expressed on these cells in cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury, but the role of IL-18R is unknown. To help define this, we compared IL-18Rα knockout with wild-type mice in cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury and found deteriorated kidney function, tubular damage, increased accumulation of leukocytes (CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cells, macrophages, and neutrophils), upregulation of early kidney injury biomarkers (serum TNF, urinary IL-18, and KIM-1 levels), and increased expression of pro-inflammatory molecules downstream of IL-18. In vitro, leukocytes from the spleen and kidneys of the knockout mice produced greater amounts of pro-inflammatory cytokines upon stimulation with concanavalin A compared to that in wild-type mice. Levels of the suppressor of cytokine signaling 1 and 3 (negative regulators of cytokine signaling) were reduced in the spleen and kidneys of IL-18Rα-deficient compared to wild-type mice. Adoptive transfer of wild-type splenocytes by IL-18Rα-deficient mice led to decreased cisplatin nephrotoxicity compared to control IL-18Rα-deficient mice. In contrast, anti-IL-18Rα and anti-IL-18Rβ antibody treatment tended to increase cisplatin nephrotoxicity in wild-type mice. Thus, signaling through IL-18Rα activates both inflammation-suppressing and pro-injury pathways in cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury.
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Key words
acute kidney injury,cisplatin nephrotoxicity,cytokines
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