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Accelerated diabetic glomerulopathy in galectin‐3/AGE receptor 3 knockout mice
Author(s) -
PUGLIESE GIUSEPPE,
PRICCI FLAVIA,
IACOBINI CARLA,
LETO GAETANO,
AMADIO LORENA,
BARSOTTI PAOLA,
FRIGERI LUCIANO,
HSU DAN K.,
VLASSARA HELEN,
LIU FU-TONG,
DI MARIO UMBERTO
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.01-0006com
Subject(s) - glycation , receptor , knockout mouse , medicine , rage (emotion) , endocrinology , glomerulopathy , scavenger receptor , glomerulosclerosis , streptozotocin , diabetic nephropathy , biology , diabetes mellitus , chemistry , glomerulonephritis , kidney , proteinuria , cholesterol , lipoprotein , neuroscience
Several molecules were shown to bind advanced glycation end products (AGEs) in vitro, but it is not known whether they all serve as AGE receptors and which functional role they play in vivo. We investigated the role of galectin‐3, a multifunctional lectin with (anti)adhesive and growth‐regulating properties, as an AGE receptor and its contribution to the development of diabetic glomerular disease, using a knockout mouse model. Galectin‐3 knockout mice obtained by gene ablation and the corresponding wild‐type mice were rendered diabetic with streptozotocin and killed 4 months later, together with age‐matched nondiabetic controls. Despite a comparable degree of metabolic derangement, galectin‐3‐deficient mice developed ac‐celerated glomerulopathy vs. the wild‐type animals, as evidenced by the more pronounced increase in protein‐uria, extracellular matrix gene expression, and mesan‐gial expansion. This was associated with a more marked renal/glomerular AGE accumulation, indicating it was attributable to the lack of galectin‐3 AGE receptor function. The galectin‐3‐deficient genotype was associated with reduced expression of receptors implicated in AGE removal (macrophage scavenger receptor A and AGE‐R1) and increased expression of those mediating cell activation (RAGE and AGE‐R2). These results show that the galectin‐3‐regulated AGE receptor pathway is operating in vivo and protects toward AGE‐induced tissue injury in contrast to that through RAGE.—Pugliese, G., Pricci, F., Iacobini, C., Leto, G., Amadio, L., Barsotti, P., Frigeri L., Hsu, D. K., Vlassara, H., Liu, F.‐T., Di Mario, U. Accelerated diabetic glomerulopathy in galectin‐3/AGE receptor 3 knockout mice. FASEB J . 15, 2471–2479 (2001)

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