Cell Death Discovery (Jan 2023)

Simultaneous blockade of VEGF-B and IL-17A ameliorated diabetic kidney disease by reducing ectopic lipid deposition and alleviating inflammation response

  • Zhonglian Cao,
  • Hui Zhao,
  • Jiajun Fan,
  • Yilan Shen,
  • Lei Han,
  • Guangjun Jing,
  • Xian Zeng,
  • Xin Jin,
  • Zeguo Zhu,
  • Qi Bian,
  • Yanyang Nan,
  • Xiaozhi Hu,
  • Xiaobin Mei,
  • Dianwen Ju,
  • Ping Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41420-023-01304-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The pathogenesis of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is complicated. Current clinical treatments fail to achieve satisfactory efficacy in the prevention of DKD progression, it urgently needs novel and effective treatment for DKD. In this study, we firstly demonstrated that renal lipid metabolism abnormality and inflammation significantly changed in DKD conditions by mining public transcriptomic data of DKD patient samples. KEGG analysis further exhibited the critical role of vascular endothelial growth factor B (VEGF-B) and interleukin 17A (IL-17A) signal pathways in DKD progression, indicating that VEGF-B and IL-17A might be the promising targets for DKD treatment. Then the potential of a novel combination therapy, anti-VEGF-B plus anti-IL-17A antibody, was evaluated for DKD treatment. Our results demonstrated that simultaneous blockade of VEGF-B and IL-17A signaling with their neutralizing antibodies alleviated renal damage and ameliorated renal function. The therapeutic effectiveness was not only related to the reduced lipid deposition especially the neutral lipids in kidney but also associated with the decreased inflammation response. Moreover, the therapy alleviated renal fibrosis by reducing collagen deposition and the expression of fibronectin and α-SMA in kidney tissues. RNA-seq analysis indicated that differential expression genes (DEGs) in db/db mice were significantly clustered into lipid metabolism, inflammation, fibrosis and DKD pathology-related pathways, and 181 of those DEGs were significantly reversed by the combinatory treatment, suggesting the underlying mechanism of administration of anti-VEGF-B and anti-IL-17A antibodies in DKD treatment. Taken together, this study identified that renal lipid metabolism abnormality and inflammation were critically involved in the progression of DKD, and simultaneous blockade of VEGF-B and IL-17A signaling represents a potential DKD therapeutic strategy.