Safaa Hammoud, Alla Ivanova, Yosuke Osaki, Steven Funk, Haichun Yang, Olga Viquez, Rachel Delgado, Dongliang Lu, Melanie Phillips Mignemi, Jane Tonello, Selene Colon, Louise Lantier, David Wasserman, Benjamin D Humphreys, Jeffrey Koenitzer, Justin Kern, Mark de Caestecker, Toren Finkel, Agnes Fogo, Nidia Messias, Irfan J Lodhi, Leslie Gewin
Kidney tubules use fatty acid oxidation (FAO) to support their high energetic requirements. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1A (CPT1A) is the rate-limiting enzyme for FAO, and it is necessary to transport long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria. To define the role of tubular CPT1A in aging and injury, we generated mice with tubule-specific deletion of Cpt1a (Cpt1aCKO mice), and the mice were either aged for 2 years or injured by aristolochic acid or unilateral ureteral obstruction. Surprisingly, Cpt1aCKO mice had no significant differences in kidney function or fibrosis compared with wild-type mice after aging or chronic injury...
February 22, 2024: JCI Insight