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Macrophages promote heat stress nephropathy in mice via the C3a-C3aR-TNF pathway.

Immunobiology 2023 January 19
Heat-stress nephropathy (HSN) is associated with recurrent dehydration. However, the mechanisms underlying HSN remain largely unknown. In this study, we evaluated the role of dehydration in HSN and kidney injury in mice. Firstly, we found that complement was strongly activated in the mice that were exposed to dehydration; and among complement components, the interaction between C3a and its receptor, C3aR, was more closely associated with kidney injury. Then two-month-old mice were intraperitoneally injected with 2% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or the C3aR inhibitor SB290157 during dehydration. DMSO-treated mice exhibited excessive macrophage infiltration, renal cell apoptosis, and kidney fibrosis. In contrast, SB290157-treated mice had no apparent kidney injury. By fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), we found that SB290157 treatment in mice remarkably inhibited macrophage infiltration and suppressed CCR2 expression in macrophages. In addition, C3a binding to C3aR promoted macrophage polarization toward the M1 phenotype and increased the production of TNF-α, which induced renal tubular epithelial cell (RTEC) apoptosis in vivo and in vitro. Interestingly, C3a treatment failed to directly induce TNF-α production and apoptosis in RTECs. However, TNF-α production in response to C3a treatment was significantly elevated when RTECs were cocultured with macrophages, suggesting that macrophages rather than RTECs are the target of C3a-C3aR interaction. At last, we proved that infusion of macrophages which highly expressed TNF-α would significantly deteriorate HSN in TNF-KO mice when they were exposed to recurrent dehydration. This study uncovers a novel mechanism underlying the pathogenesis of HSN, and a potential pathway to prevent kidney injury during dehydration.

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