Divisions of Nephrology and Hypertension, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
Diabetes and Cardiovascular Center, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol. 2021 Mar 1;320(3):F505-F517. doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.00565.2020. Epub 2021 Feb 1.
Recent evidence suggests that dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4) inhibition with saxagliptin (Saxa) is renoprotective under comorbid conditions associated with activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), such as diabetes, obesity, and hypertension, which confer a high cardiovascular risk. Immune system activation is now recognized as a contributor to RAAS-mediated tissue injury, and, importantly, immunomodulatory effects of DPP4 have been reported. Accordingly, we examined the hypothesis that DPP4 inhibition with Saxa attenuates angiotensin II (ANG II)-induced kidney injury and albuminuria via attenuation of immune activation in the kidney. To this end, male mice were infused with either vehicle or ANG II (1,000 ng/kg/min, s.c.) for 3 wk and received either placebo or Saxa (10 mg/kg/day, p.o.) during the final 2 wk. ANG II infusion increased kidney, but not plasma, DPP4 activity in vivo as well as DPP4 activity in cultured proximal tubule cells. The latter was prevented by angiotensin receptor blockade with olmesartan. Further, ANG II induced hypertension and kidney injury characterized by mesangial expansion, mitochondrial damage, reduced brush border megalin expression, and albuminuria. Saxa inhibited DPP4 activity ∼50% in vivo and attenuated ANG II-mediated kidney injury, independent of blood pressure. Further mechanistic experiments revealed mitigation by Saxa of proinflammatory and profibrotic mediators activated by ANG II in the kidney, including CD8 T cells, resident macrophages (CD11bF4/80Ly6C), and neutrophils. In addition, Saxa improved ANG II suppressed anti-inflammatory regulatory T cell and T helper 2 lymphocyte activity. Taken together, these results demonstrate, for the first time, blood pressure-independent involvement of renal DPP4 activation contributing to RAAS-dependent kidney injury and immune activation. This work highlights the role of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4) in promoting ANG II-mediated kidney inflammation and injury. Specifically, ANG II infusion in mice led to increases in blood pressure and kidney DPP4 activity, which then led to activation of CD8 T cells, Ly6C macrophages, and neutrophils and suppression of anti-inflammatory T helper 2 lymphocytes and regulatory T cells. Collectively, this led to kidney injury, characterized by mesangial expansion, mitochondrial damage, and albuminuria, which were mitigated by DPP4 inhibition independent of blood pressure reduction.
最近的证据表明,二肽基肽酶-4(DPP4)抑制剂沙格列汀(Saxa)在与肾素-血管紧张素-醛固酮系统(RAAS)激活相关的合并症情况下具有肾脏保护作用,例如糖尿病、肥胖症和高血压,这些疾病会带来很高的心血管风险。免疫系统激活现在被认为是 RAAS 介导的组织损伤的一个促成因素,重要的是,已经报道了 DPP4 的免疫调节作用。因此,我们假设 DPP4 抑制用 Saxa 通过减轻肾脏中的免疫激活来减轻血管紧张素 II(ANG II)诱导的肾脏损伤和白蛋白尿。为此,雄性小鼠接受载体或 ANG II(1000ng/kg/min,皮下注射)输注 3 周,并在最后 2 周接受安慰剂或 Saxa(10mg/kg/天,口服)。ANG II 输注增加了体内肾脏而不是血浆中的 DPP4 活性以及培养的近端肾小管细胞中的 DPP4 活性。用血管紧张素受体阻滞剂奥美沙坦可预防后者。此外,ANG II 诱导高血压和肾脏损伤,其特征为系膜扩张、线粒体损伤、刷状缘 megalin 表达减少和白蛋白尿。Saxa 在体内抑制约 50%的 DPP4 活性,并减轻 ANG II 介导的肾脏损伤,而与血压无关。进一步的机制实验表明,Saxa 减轻了 ANG II 在肾脏中激活的促炎和促纤维化介质,包括 CD8 T 细胞、固有巨噬细胞(CD11bF4/80Ly6C)和中性粒细胞。此外,Saxa 改善了 ANG II 抑制的抗炎调节性 T 细胞和 Th2 淋巴细胞活性。总之,这些结果首次证明了肾脏 DPP4 激活的血压独立参与导致 RAAS 依赖性肾脏损伤和免疫激活。这项工作强调了二肽基肽酶-4(DPP4)在促进 ANG II 介导的肾脏炎症和损伤中的作用。具体来说,在小鼠中输注 ANG II 导致血压升高和肾脏 DPP4 活性增加,进而导致 CD8 T 细胞、Ly6C 巨噬细胞和中性粒细胞的激活以及抗炎性 Th2 淋巴细胞和调节性 T 细胞的抑制。总的来说,这导致了肾脏损伤,其特征为系膜扩张、线粒体损伤和白蛋白尿,这些损伤可通过 DPP4 抑制独立于血压降低来减轻。