Pharmacological inhibition of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated exacerbates acute kidney injury by activating p53 signaling in mice.
Masahiro UeharaTetsuro KusabaTomoharu IdaKunihiro NakaiTomohiro NakataAya TomitaNoriko Watanabe-UeharaKisho IkedaTakashi KitaniNoriyuki YamashitaYuhei KiritaSatoaki MatobaBenjamin D HumphreysKeiichi TamagakiPublished in: Scientific reports (2020)
The DNA damage response after kidney injury induces cell cycle arrest in renal tubular epithelial cells, resulting in the secretion of pro-fibrotic cytokines, thereby promoting interstitial fibrosis in a paracrine manner. Phosphorylation of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) is the initial step in the DNA damage response and subsequent cell cycle arrest; however, the effects of ATM inhibition on the injured kidney have not been explored. Pharmacological ATM inhibition by KU55933 in cisplatin-treated mice did not ameliorate, but instead exacerbated cisplatin-induced DNA damage and tubular injury, thereby increasing mortality. Analysis of isolated tubular epithelia by FACS from bigenic SLC34a1-CreERt2; R26tdTomato proximal tubular-specific reporter mice revealed that KU55933 upregulated p53 and subsequent pro-apoptotic signaling in tubular epithelia of cisplatin-treated mice, leading to marked mitochondrial injury and apoptosis. In addition, KU55933 attenuated several DNA repair processes after cisplatin treatment, including single-strand DNA repair and Fanconi anemia pathways, suggesting that DNA repair after dual treatment of cisplatin and KU55933 was not sufficient to prevent the cisplatin-induced tubular injury. Our study suggested that ATM inhibition does not increase DNA repair after cisplatin-induced DNA damage and exacerbates tubular injury through the upregulation of p53-dependent pro-apoptotic signaling. Acute kidney injury must be carefully monitored when ATM inhibitors become available in clinical practice in the future.
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- dna damage response
- dna damage
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- acute kidney injury
- oxidative stress
- high glucose
- high fat diet induced
- pi k akt
- anti inflammatory
- clinical practice
- wild type
- cardiac surgery
- early onset
- crispr cas
- chronic kidney disease
- risk factors
- combination therapy
- poor prognosis
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- long non coding rna
- liver fibrosis