Abstract

Proteinuria is an independent risk factor for progression of renal diseases. Glia maturation factor-beta (GMF-beta), a 17-kDa brain-specific protein originally purified as a neurotrophic factor from brain, was induced in renal proximal tubular (PT) cells by proteinuria. To examine the role of GMF-beta in PT cells, we constructed PT cell lines continuously expressing GMF-beta. The PT cells overexpressing GMF-beta acquired susceptibility to cell death upon stimulation with tumor necrosis factor-alpha and angiotensin II, both of which are reported to cause oxidative stress. GMF-beta overexpression also promoted oxidative insults by H2O2, leading to the reorganization of F-actin as well as apoptosis in non-brain cells (not only PT cells, but also NIH 3T3 cells). The measurement of intracellular reactive oxygen species in the GMF-beta-overexpressing cells showed a sustained increase in H2O2 in response to tumor necrosis factor-alpha, angiotensin II, and H2O2 stimuli. The sustained increase in H2O2 was caused by an increase in the activity of the H2O2-producing enzyme copper/zinc-superoxide dismutase, a decrease in the activities of the H2O2-reducing enzymes catalase and glutathione peroxidase, and a depletion of the content of the cellular glutathione peroxidase substrate GSH. The p38 pathway was significantly involved in the sustained oxidative stress to the cells. Taken together, the alteration of the antioxidant enzyme activities, in particular the peroxide-scavenging deficit, underlies the susceptibility to cell death in GMF-beta-overexpressing cells. In conclusion, we suggest that the proteinuria induction of GMF-beta in renal PT cells may play a critical role in the progression of renal diseases by enhancing oxidative injuries.

Highlights

  • Proteinuria is an independent risk factor for progression of renal diseases

  • These results suggest that the induction of the brain-specific GMF-␤ gene in the kidney may play a key role in renal disease progression caused by proteinuria

  • GMF-␤ Overexpression Enhances Apoptosis Caused by H2O2—To further investigate the property of the cells with GMF-␤ overexpression, we studied the effect of GMF-␤ overexpression on apoptosis of proximal tubular (PT) cells under oxidative stress

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Summary

Introduction

Proteinuria is an independent risk factor for progression of renal diseases. Glia maturation factor-␤ (GMF-␤), a 17-kDa brain-specific protein originally purified as a neurotrophic factor from brain, was induced in renal proximal tubular (PT) cells by proteinuria. We demonstrate that GMF-␤-overexpressing cells, as a mechanism of the vulnerability to oxidative stress, caused a prolonged increase in H2O2 through changes in several antioxidant enzyme activities and that p38 was significantly involved in this process. It was found that GMF-␤ stable transformants were more susceptible to oxidative stress caused by both agents than were mock-transfected wild-type cells (Fig. 4, A and B).

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