Cell Death and Disease (Nov 2022)

IL-18 deficiency ameliorates the progression from AKI to CKD

  • Junjun Luan,
  • Jingqi Fu,
  • Congcong Jiao,
  • Xiangnan Hao,
  • Zixuan Feng,
  • Lingzi Zhu,
  • Yixiao Zhang,
  • Guangyu Zhou,
  • Hongyu Li,
  • Wei Yang,
  • Peter S. T. Yuen,
  • Jeffrey B. Kopp,
  • Jingbo Pi,
  • Hua Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-022-05394-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Inflammation is an important factor in the progression from acute kidney injury (AKI) to chronic kidney disease (CKD). The role of interleukin (IL)-18 in this progression has not been examined. We aimed to clarify whether and how IL-18 limits this progression. In a folic acid induced renal injury mouse model, we studied the time course of kidney injury and renal IL-18 expression. In wild-type mice following injection, renal IL-18 expression increased. In parallel, we characterized other processes, including at day 2, renal tubular necroptosis assessed by receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase1 (RIPK1) and RIPK3; at day 14, transdifferentiation (assessed by transforming growth factor β1, vimentin and E-cadherin); and at day 30, fibrosis (assessed by collagen 1). In IL-18 knockout mice given folate, compared to wild-type mice, tubular damage and necroptosis, transdifferentiation, and renal fibrosis were attenuated. Importantly, IL-18 deletion decreased numbers of renal M1 macrophages and M1 macrophage cytokine levels at day 14, and reduced M2 macrophages numbers and macrophage cytokine expression at day 30. In HK-2 cells, IL-18 knockdown attenuated necroptosis, transdifferentiating and fibrosis.In patients with tubulointerstitial nephritis, IL-18 protein expression was increased on renal biopsies using immunohistochemistry. We conclude that genetic IL-18 deficiency ameliorates renal tubular damage, necroptosis, cell transdifferentiation, and fibrosis. The renoprotective role of IL-18 deletion in the progression from AKI to fibrosis may be mediated by reducing a switch in predominance from M1 to profibrotic M2 macrophages during the process of kidney repair.