Abstract

In diabetic nephropathy, connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) is upregulated and bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP-7) is downregulated. CTGF is known to inhibit BMP-4, but similar cross-talk between BMP-7 and CTGF has not been studied. In this study, it was hypothesized that CTGF acts as an inhibitor of BMP-7 signaling activity in diabetic nephropathy. Compared with diabetic wild-type CTGF(+/+) mice, diabetic CTGF(+/-) mice had approximately 50% lower CTGF mRNA and protein, less severe albuminuria, no thickening of the glomerular basement membrane, and preserved matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity. Although the amount of BMP-7 mRNA was similar in the kidneys of diabetic CTGF(+/+) and CTGF(+/-) mice, phosphorylation of the BMP signal transduction protein Smad1/5 and expression of the BMP target gene Id1 were lower in diabetic CTGF(+/+) mice. Moreover, renal Id1 mRNA expression correlated with albuminuria (R = -0.86) and MMP activity (R = 0.76). In normoglycemic mice, intraperitoneal injection of CTGF led to a decrease of pSmad1/5 in the renal cortex. In cultured renal glomerular and tubulointerstitial cells, CTGF diminished BMP-7 signaling activity, evidenced by lower levels of pSmad1/5, Id1 mRNA, and BMP-responsive element-luciferase activity. Co-immunoprecipitation, solid-phase binding assay, and surface plasmon resonance analysis showed that CTGF binds BMP-7 with high affinity (Kd approximately 14 nM). In conclusion, upregulation of CTGF inhibits BMP-7 signal transduction in the diabetic kidney and contributes to altered gene transcription, reduced MMP activity, glomerular basement membrane thickening, and albuminuria, all of which are hallmarks of diabetic nephropathy.

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