1. Adrenomedullin-RAMP2 System Suppresses ER Stress-Induced Tubule Cell Death and Is Involved in Kidney Protection.
- Author
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Uetake, Ryuichi, Sakurai, Takayuki, Kamiyoshi, Akiko, Ichikawa-Shindo, Yuka, Kawate, Hisaka, Iesato, Yasuhiro, Yoshizawa, Takahiro, Koyama, Teruhide, Yang, Lei, Toriyama, Yuichi, Yamauchi, Akihiro, Igarashi, Kyoko, Tanaka, Megumu, Kuwabara, Takashige, Mori, Kiyoshi, Yanagita, Motoko, Mukoyama, Masashi, and Shindo, Takayuki
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ADRENOMEDULLIN , *CELL death , *BIOACTIVE compounds , *CALCITONIN gene-related peptide , *CALCITONIN receptors , *PHENOTYPES , *LABORATORY mice , *CELLULAR signal transduction , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Various bioactive peptides have been implicated in the homeostasis of organs and tissues. Adrenomedullin (AM) is a peptide with various bioactivities. AM-receptor, calcitonin-receptor-like receptor (CLR) associates with one of the subtypes of the accessory proteins, RAMPs. Among the RAMP subisoforms, only RAMP2 knockout mice (−/−) reproduce the phenotype of embryonic lethality of AM−/−, illustrating the importance of the AM-RAMP2-signaling system. Although AM and RAMP2 are abundantly expressed in kidney, their function there remains largely unknown. We used genetically modified mice to assess the pathophysiological functions of the AM-RAMP2 system. RAMP2+/− mice and their wild-type littermates were used in a streptozotocin (STZ)-induced renal injury model. The effect of STZ on glomeruli did not differ between the 2 types of mice. On the other hand, damage to the proximal urinary tubules was greater in RAMP2+/−. Tubular injury in RAMP2+/− was resistant to correction of blood glucose by insulin administration. We examined the effect of STZ on human renal proximal tubule epithelial cells (RPTECs), which express glucose transporter 2 (GLUT2), the glucose transporter that specifically takes up STZ. STZ activated the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress sensor protein kinase RNA-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK). AM suppressed PERK activation, its downstream signaling, and CCAAT/enhancer-binding homologous protein (CHOP)-induced cell death. We confirmed that the tubular damage was caused by ER stress-induced cell death using tunicamycin (TUN), which directly evokes ER stress. In RAMP2+/− kidneys, TUN caused severe injury with enhanced ER stress. In wild-type mice, TUN-induced tubular damage was reversed by AM administration. On the other hand, in RAMP2+/−, the rescue effect of exogenous AM was lost. These results indicate that the AM-RAMP2 system suppresses ER stress-induced tubule cell death, thereby exerting a protective effect on kidney. The AM-RAMP2 system thus has the potential to serve as a therapeutic target in kidney disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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