Leukocytes and the kidney contribute to interstitial inflammation in lupus nephritis
Author(s) -
Laura AdalidPeralta,
Alexis Mathian,
Thi Tran,
Laurence BouchetDelbos,
Ingrid Durand–Gasselin,
D. Berrebi,
Michel Peuchmaur,
J Couderc,
D Émilie,
Sophie Koutouzov
Publication year - 2007
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/sj.ki.5002625
Subject(s) - lupus nephritis , medicine , chemokine , infiltration (hvac) , nephritis , kidney , immunology , inflammation , glomerulonephritis , kidney disease , nephritic syndrome , pathology , disease , physics , thermodynamics
Interstitial leucocyte infiltration, a prominent feature of lupus nephritis, predicts deterioration of renal function. We used two models of lupus nephritis in mice, one with chronic spontaneous disease and the other with acute interferon-alpha (IFN alpha)-mediated disease. The latter is characterized by the virtual absence of interstitial infiltration. In vivo migration assays showed that splenic leukocytes from spontaneously nephritic mice tended to migrate into non-inflamed syngeneic kidneys. This was enhanced if the recipient kidneys were already inflamed. Kidneys from both chronically and acutely nephritic mice showed similar ability to recruit splenic leukocytes from chronically diseased mice. Leukocytes from acutely diseased mice, however, failed to migrate into chronically inflamed kidney. Compared with those with chronic nephritis, the kidneys of acute nephritic mice expressed less of the inflammatory chemokine CXCL13/BLC. Moreover, leukocytes from acute nephritic mice displayed impaired migration, in vitro, to T-cell chemokine attractants. This study links leukocyte infiltration to both kidney chemokine expression, and leukocyte chemotaxis to kidney-expressed chemokines.
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