Histone deacetylase 4 selectively contributes to podocyte injury in diabetic nephropathy
Author(s) -
Xiaojie Wang,
Jiang Liu,
Junhui Zhen,
Chun Zhang,
Qiang Wan,
Guangyi Liu,
Xinbing Wei,
Yan Zhang,
Ziying Wang,
Huirong Han,
Huiyan Xu,
Chanchan Bao,
Zhenyu Song,
Xiumei Zhang,
Ningjun Li,
Fan Yi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1038/ki.2014.111
Subject(s) - diabetic nephropathy , podocyte , histone deacetylase , hdac4 , autophagy , medicine , histone deacetylase 2 , hdac6 , cancer research , nephropathy , podocin , kidney , gene silencing , inflammasome , pharmacology , diabetes mellitus , inflammation , endocrinology , biology , histone , apoptosis , proteinuria , biochemistry , gene
Studies have highlighted the importance of histone deacetylase (HDAC)-mediated epigenetic processes in the development of diabetic complications. Inhibitors of HDAC are a novel class of therapeutic agents in diabetic nephropathy, but currently available inhibitors are mostly nonselective inhibit multiple HDACs, and different HDACs serve very distinct functions. Therefore, it is essential to determine the role of individual HDACs in diabetic nephropathy and develop HDAC inhibitors with improved specificity. First, we identified the expression patterns of HDACs and found that, among zinc-dependent HDACs, HDAC2/4/5 were upregulated in the kidney from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats, diabetic db/db mice, and in kidney biopsies from diabetic patients. Podocytes treated with high glucose, advanced glycation end products, or transforming growth factor-β (common detrimental factors in diabetic nephropathy) selectively increased HDAC4 expression. The role of HDAC4 was evaluated by in vivo gene silencing by intrarenal lentiviral gene delivery and found to reduce renal injury in diabetic rats. Podocyte injury was associated with suppressing autophagy and exacerbating inflammation by HDAC4-STAT1 signaling in vitro. Thus, HDAC4 contributes to podocyte injury and is one of critical components of a signal transduction pathway that links renal injury to autophagy in diabetic nephropathy.
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