Pathogenic role of innate immunity in a model of chronic NO inhibition associated with salt overload.
Fernanda Florencia Fregnan ZambomKarin Carneiro OliveiraOrestes Foresto-NetoViviane Dias FaustinoVictor Ferreira ÁvilaAmanda Helen AlbinoSimone Costa Alarcon AriasRildo Aparecido VolpiniDenise Maria Avancini Costa MalheirosNiels Olsen Saraiva CamaraRoberto ZatzClarice Kazue FujiharaPublished in: American journal of physiology. Renal physiology (2019)
Nitric oxide inhibition with Nω-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME), along with salt overload, leads to hypertension, albuminuria, glomerulosclerosis, glomerular ischemia, and interstitial fibrosis, characterizing a chronic kidney disease (CKD) model. Previous findings of this laboratory and elsewhere have suggested that activation of at least two pathways of innate immunity, Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)/NF-κB and nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain, leucine-rich repeat, and pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome/IL-1β, occurs in several experimental models of CKD and that progression of renal injury can be slowed with inhibition of these pathways. In the present study, we investigated whether activation of innate immunity, through either the TLR4/NF-κB or NLRP3/IL-1β pathway, is involved in the pathogenesis of renal injury in chronic nitric oxide inhibition with the salt-overload model. Adult male Munich-Wistar rats that received l-NAME in drinking water with salt overload (HS + N group) were treated with allopurinol (ALLO) as an NLRP3 inhibitor (HS + N + ALLO group) or pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC) as an NF-κB inhibitor (HS + N + PDTC group). After 4 wk, HS + N rats developed hypertension, albuminuria, and renal injury along with renal inflammation, oxidative stress, and activation of both the NLRP3/IL-1β and TLR4/NF-κB pathways. ALLO lowered renal uric acid and inhibited the NLRP3 pathway. These effects were associated with amelioration of hypertension, albuminuria, and interstitial inflammation/fibrosis but not glomerular injury. PDTC inhibited the renal NF-κB system and lowered the number of interstitial cells staining positively for NLRP3. PDTC also reduced renal xanthine oxidase activity and uric acid. Overall, PDTC promoted a more efficient anti-inflammatory and nephroprotective effect than ALLO. The NLRP3/IL-1β and TLR4/NF-κB pathways act in parallel to promote renal injury/inflammation and must be simultaneously inhibited for best nephroprotection.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- toll like receptor
- nuclear factor
- uric acid
- nlrp inflammasome
- nitric oxide
- signaling pathway
- inflammatory response
- chronic kidney disease
- lps induced
- drinking water
- blood pressure
- immune response
- induced apoptosis
- pi k akt
- metabolic syndrome
- dna damage
- diabetic rats
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- transcription factor
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- health risk
- mass spectrometry
- amino acid
- cell cycle arrest
- drug induced
- flow cytometry