Renal medullary osmolytes NaCl and urea differentially modulate human tubular cell cytokine expression and monocyte recruitment.
Jessica SchmitzNicolas BraunsAnne M HüsingMartina FlechsigThorsten GlombJan Hinrich BräsenHermann HallerSibylle von VietinghoffPublished in: European journal of immunology (2022)
Renal immune cells serve as sentinels against ascending bacteria but also promote detrimental inflammation. The kidney medulla is characterized by extreme electrolyte concentrations. We here address how its main osmolytes, NaCl and urea, regulate tubular cell cytokine expression and monocyte chemotaxis. In the healthy human kidney, more monocytes were detected in medulla than cortex. The monocyte gradient was attenuated in patients with medullary NaCl depletion by loop diuretic therapy and in the nephrotic syndrome. Renal tubular epithelial cell gene expression responded similarly to NaCl and tonicity control mannitol, but not urea. NaCl significantly upregulated chemotactic cytokines, most markedly CCL26, CCL2, and CSF1. This induction was inhibited by the ROS scavenger n-acetylcysteine. In contrast, urea, the main medullary osmolyte in catabolism, dampened tubular epithelial CCL26 and CSF1 expression. Renal medullary chemokine and monocyte marker expression decreased in catabolic mice. NaCl-, but not urea-stimulated tubular epithelium or CCL2 and CCL26, promoted human classical monocyte migration. CCL26 improved bactericidal function. In the human kidney medulla, monocyte densities correlated with tubular CCL26 protein abundance. In summary, medullary-range NaCl, but not urea, promotes tubular cytokine expression and monocyte recruitment. This may contribute to the pyelonephritis vulnerability in catabolism but can possibly be harnessed against pathologic inflammation.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- high glucose
- dendritic cells
- poor prognosis
- liver fibrosis
- liver injury
- gene expression
- peripheral blood
- binding protein
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- oxidative stress
- climate change
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- immune response
- single cell
- dna methylation
- cell therapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- radiation therapy
- adipose tissue
- heart failure
- reactive oxygen species
- atrial fibrillation
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- smoking cessation
- small molecule
- cell death
- amino acid
- anaerobic digestion
- antibiotic resistance genes