Loss of legumain induces premature senescence and mediates aging-related renal fibrosis.
Dekun WangLichun KangChuan'ai ChenJiasen GuoLingfang DuDonghui ZhouGang LiYuying ZhangXue MiMianzhi ZhangShuxia LiuXiaoyue TanPublished in: Aging cell (2022)
Aging is an independent risk factor for acute kidney injury and subsequent chronic kidney diseases, while the underlying mechanism is still elusive. Here, we found that renal tubules highly express a conserved lysosomal endopeptidase, legumain, which is significantly downregulated with the growing of age. Tubule-specific legumain-knockout mice exhibit spontaneous renal interstitial fibrosis from the 3rd month. In the tubule-specific legumain-knockout mice and the cultured legumain-knockdown HK-2 cells, legumain deficiency induces the activation of tubular senescence and thus increases the secretion of profibrotic senescence-associated cytokines, which in turn accelerates the activation of fibroblasts. Blockage of senescence mitigates the fibrotic lesion caused by legumain deficiency. Mechanistically, we found that silencing down of legumain leads to the elevated lysosome pH value, enlargement of lysosome size, and increase of lysosomal voltage dependent membrane channel proteins. Either legumain downregulation or aging alone induces the activation of nuclear transcription factors EB (TFEB) while it fails to further upregulate in the elderly legumain-knockdown tubules, accompanied with impaired mitophagy and increased mitochondrial ROS (mtROS) accumulation. Therapeutically, supplementation of exosomal legumain ameliorated fibronectin and collagen I production in an in vitro coculture system of tubular cells and fibroblasts. Altogether, our data demonstrate that loss of legumain in combined with aging dysregulates lysosomal homeostasis, although either aging or legumain deficiency alone induces lysosome adaptation via stimulating lysosomal biogenesis. Consequently, impaired mitophagy leads to mtROS accumulation and therefore activates tubular senescence and boosts the interstitial fibrosis.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- endothelial cells
- acute kidney injury
- induced apoptosis
- transcription factor
- stress induced
- high glucose
- cell proliferation
- cardiac surgery
- signaling pathway
- radiation therapy
- oxidative stress
- electronic health record
- cell death
- systemic sclerosis
- extracellular matrix
- big data
- deep learning
- artificial intelligence
- middle aged
- endoplasmic reticulum stress