Publication | Open Access
Heme Oxygenase-1 Inhibits Renal Tubular Macroautophagy in Acute Kidney Injury
151
Citations
32
References
2010
Year
MitophagyRenal PathologyApoptosisRenal InflammationCell DeathImmunologyProtective Antioxidant HemeOxidative StressCell AutophagyAutophagyAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseCell SignalingKidney FailureAutophagy ProgressionRenal PathophysiologyHeme HomeostasisCell BiologyBasal AutophagyUrologyMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Autophagy is a tightly regulated, programmed mechanism to eliminate damaged organelles and proteins from a cell to maintain homeostasis. Cisplatin, a chemotherapeutic agent, accumulates in the proximal tubules of the kidney and causes dose-dependent nephrotoxicity, which may involve autophagy. In the kidney, cisplatin induces the protective antioxidant heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). In this study, we examined the relationship between autophagy and HO-1 during cisplatin-mediated acute kidney injury (AKI). In wild-type primary proximal tubule cells (PTC), we observed a time-dependent increase in autophagy after cisplatin. In HO-1(-/-) PTC, however, we observed significantly higher levels of basal autophagy, impaired progression of autophagy, and increased apoptosis after cisplatin. Restoring HO-1 expression in these cells reversed the autophagic response and inhibited apoptosis after treatment with cisplatin. In vivo, although both wild-type and HO-1-deficient mice exhibited autophagosomes in the proximal tubules of the kidney in response to cisplatin, HO-1-deficient mice had significantly more autophagosomes, even in saline-treated animals. In addition, ecdysone-induced overexpression of HO-1 in cells led to a delay in autophagy progression, generated significantly lower levels of reactive oxygen species, and protected against cisplatin cytotoxicity. These findings demonstrate that HO-1 inhibits autophagy, suggesting that the heme oxygenase system may contain therapeutic targets for AKI.
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