Abstract

Nephrocalcinosis is a clinicopathological entity characterized by microscopic calcium crystals in the renal parenchyma, within the tubular lumen or in the interstitium. Crystal binding to tubular cells may be the cause underlying nephrocalcinosis and nephrolithiasis. Pathological circumstances, such as acute cortical necrosis, may induce healthy cells to acquire a crystal-binding phenotype. The present study aimed to investigate whether human renal proximal tubular cells (HK-2 cells) can form calcium phosphate deposits under osteogenic conditions, and whether apoptosis and/or osteogenic-like processes are involved in cell calcification. HK-2 cells were cultured in standard or osteogenic medium for 1, 5, and 15 days. Von Kossa staining and ESEM were used to analyze crystal deposition. Apoptosis was investigated, analyzing caspase activation by in-cell Western assay, membrane translocation of phosphotidylserine by annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide staining, and DNA fragmentation by TUNEL assay. qRT/PCR, immunolabeling and cytochemistry were performed to assess osteogenic activation (Runx2, Osteonectin, Osteopontin and ALP), and early genes of apoptosis (BAX, Bcl-2). HK-2 cell mineralization was successfully induced on adding osteogenic medium. Calcium phosphate deposition increased in a time-dependent manner, and calcified cell aggregates exhibited characteristic signs of apoptosis. At 15 days, calcifying HK-2 cells revealed osteogenic markers, such as Runx2, ALP, osteonectin and osteopontin. Monitoring the processes at 1, 5, and 15 days showed apoptosis starting already after 5 days of osteogenic induction, when the first small calcium phosphate crystals began to appear on areas where cell aggregates were in apoptotic conditions. The cell death process proved caspase-dependent. The importance of apoptosis was reinforced by the time-dependent increase in BAX expression, starting from day 1. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that apoptosis triggered HK-2 calcification even before any calcium phosphate crystal deposition or acquisition of an osteogenic phenotype.

Highlights

  • Nephrocalcinosis is a clinicopathological entity characterized by microscopic calcium crystal deposition in the renalOfficial journal of the Cell Death Differentiation AssociationPriante et al Cell Death Discovery (2019)5:57 condition causing acute and prolonged shock[10,11,12].The characteristic cortical calcification develops within a few weeks

  • The present study aimed to investigate whether HK-2 cells can form calcium phosphate deposits under osteogenic conditions, and whether apoptosis and an osteogenic-like process are involved in the cell calcification process

  • HK-2 cells form cell aggregates containing calcium phosphate HK-2 cells were treated with osteogenic medium for 1, 5, and 15 days, and calcium phosphate deposition was monitored by von Kossa staining and environmental SEM (ESEM) analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Official journal of the Cell Death Differentiation Association. Priante et al Cell Death Discovery (2019)5:57 condition causing acute and prolonged shock[10,11,12].The characteristic cortical calcification develops within a few weeks. Ectopic calcification is known to follow necrosis, and cortical nephrocalcinosis has been attributed to the presence of necrotic tubular cells[13,14]. The role of cell death in the more common medullary nephrocalcinosis remains unclear. Ectopic renal calcification might be an osteogenic-like process, and evidence in the literature supports the notion that resident renal cells could be prompted to transdifferentiate, or differentiate along an osteogenic lineage[16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]. We were the first to suggest that nephrocalcinosis might be an osteogenic-like, cell-driven process, with human renal cells undergoing calcification under certain circumstances in much the same way as in vascular calcification[24,25,26,27]

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