Abstract

Epithelial repair following acute kidney injury (AKI) requires epithelial-mesenchyme-epithelial cycling associated with transient re-expression of genes normally expressed during kidney development as well as activation of growth factors and cytokine-induced signaling. In normal kidney, the Hnf-1β transcription factor drives nephrogenesis, tubulogenesis and epithelial homeostasis through the regulation of epithelial planar cell polarity and expression of developmental or tubular segment-specific genes. In a mouse model of ischemic AKI induced by a 2-hours hemorrhagic shock, we show that expression of this factor is tightly regulated in the early phase of renal repair with a biphasic expression profile (early down-regulation followed by transient over-expression). These changes are associated to tubular epithelial differentiation as assessed by KSP-cadherin and megalin-cubilin endocytic complex expression analysis. In addition, early decrease in Hnf1b expression is associated with the transient over-expression of one of its main target genes, the suppressor of cytokine signaling Socs3, which has been shown essential for renal repair. In vitro, hypoxia induced early up-regulation of Hnf-1β from 1 to 24 hours, independently of the hypoxia-inducible factor Hif-1α. When prolonged, hypoxia induced Hnf-1β down-regulation while normoxia led to Hnf-1β normalization. Last, Hnf-1β down-regulation using RNA interference in HK-2 cells led to phenotype switch from an epithelial to a mesenchyme state. Taken together, we showed that Hnf-1β may drive recovery from ischemic AKI by regulating both the expression of genes important for homeostasis control during organ repair and the state of epithelial cell differentiation.

Highlights

  • In the general population, acute renal failure (ARF) is noted in 1% of all hospital admissions

  • We found that hepatocyte nuclear factor-1b (Hnf-1b) drives recovery from ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI) by regulating both the expression of important genes for homeostasis control during proximal tubule (PT) repair, and the state of epithelial cell differentiation

  • A 120-minutes hemorrhagic shock resulted in significant AKI with dramatic functional, histological and mRNA expression changes of key AKI genes, and may be a valuable tool to decipher the mechanisms of renal repair

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Summary

Introduction

Acute renal failure (ARF) is noted in 1% of all hospital admissions. Ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI) is the major cause of ARF and is associated with increased mortality in hospitalized populations [1]. Epithelialmesenchyme-epithelial cycling allows almost complete recovery of renal architecture and renal function in most of the cases [3]. Tight regulation of this complex process involves cell cycle control [4], transient re-expression of genes normally expressed during kidney development, including Pax, Notch-2, Wnt and Ets-1 [5,6,7,8], and transient activation of growth factors- or cytokineinduced signaling, including the hepatocyte and epidermal growth factor (HGF/EGF) and the interleukine-6 receptor pathways [9,10]

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