Login / Signup

Blocking thrombospondin-1 signaling via CD47 mitigates renal interstitial fibrosis.

Sohel M JuloviBarkha SanganeriaNikita MinhasKedar GhimireBrian NankivellNatasha M Rogers
Published in: Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology (2020)
Acute kidney injury triggers a complex cascade of molecular responses that can culminate in maladaptive repair and fibrosis. We have previously reported that the matrix protein thrombospondin-1 (TSP1), binding its high affinity its receptor CD47, promotes acute kidney injury. However, the role of this pathway in promoting fibrosis is less clear. Hypothesizing that limiting TSP1-CD47 signaling is protective against fibrosis, we interrogated this pathway in a mouse model of chronic ischemic kidney injury. Plasma and renal parenchymal expression of TSP1 in patients with chronic kidney disease was also assessed. We found that CD47-/- mice or wild-type mice treated with a CD47 blocking antibody showed clear amelioration of fibrotic histological changes compared to control animals. Wild-type mice showed upregulated TSP1 and pro-fibrotic markers which were significantly abrogated in CD47-/- and antibody-treated cohorts. Renal tubular epithelial cells isolated from WT mice showed robust upregulation of pro-fibrotic markers following hypoxic stress or exogenous TSP1, which was mitigated in CD47-/- cells. Patient sera showed a proportionate correlation between TSP1 levels and worsening glomerular filtration rate. Immunohistochemistry of human kidney tissue demonstrated tubular and glomerular matrix localization of TSP1 expression in patients with CKD. These data suggest that renal tubular epithelial cells contribute to fibrosis by activating TSP1-CD47 signaling, and point to CD47 as a potential target to limit fibrosis following ischemic injury.
Keyphrases