Hyperlipidemia-associated renal damage decreases Klotho expression in kidneys from ApoE knockout mice
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Sastre, Cristina; Rubio-Navarro, Alfonso; Buendía, Irene; Gomez-Guerrero, Carmen; Blanco, Julia; Mas, Sebastian; Egido, Jesus; Blanco-Colio, Luis Miguel; Ortiz, Alberto; Moreno, Juan AntonioEditorial
Public Library of Science
Date
2013-12-30Referencia bibliográfica
Sastre C, Rubio-Navarro A, Buendía I, Gómez-Guerrero C, Blanco J, Mas S, Egido J, Blanco-Colio LM, Ortiz A, Moreno JA. Hyperlipidemia-associated renal damage decreases Klotho expression in kidneys from ApoE knockout mice. PLoS One. 2013 Dec 30;8(12):e83713. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083713. PMID: 24386260; PMCID: PMC3875485.
Sponsorship
This work has been supported by grants from FIS (Programa Miguel Servet: CP10/00479) to JAM and ISCIII (Programa de Estabilización) and PI10/00234 to LMBC. Fundación Conchita Rábago to CS and ARN. Ministry of Science (SAF2012/38830) and Sociedad Española de Nefrologia to CGG. ISCIII and FEDER funds PS09/00447, Sociedad Española de Nefrologia, ISCIII-RETIC REDinREN/RD06/0016, Comunidad de Madrid/CIFRA/S2010/BMD-2378 to AO, and ISCIII-Redes RECAVA (RD06/0014/0035) REDINREN (RD12/0021/), European Network (HEALTH F2-2008-200647), Euro Salud EUS2005-03565, cvREMOD, Fundacion Lilly, FRIAT and ISCIII fund PI10/00072 to JE.Abstract
Background: Klotho is a renal protein with anti-aging properties that is downregulated in conditions related to kidney injury. Hyperlipidemia accelerates the progression of renal damage, but the mechanisms of the deleterious effects of hyperlipidemia remain unclear.
Methods: We evaluated whether hyperlipidemia modulates Klotho expression in kidneys from C57BL/6 and hyperlipidemic apolipoprotein E knockout (ApoE KO) mice fed with a normal chow diet (ND) or a Western-type high cholesterol-fat diet (HC) for 5 to 10 weeks, respectively.
Results: In ApoE KO mice, the HC diet increased serum and renal cholesterol levels, kidney injury severity, kidney macrophage infiltration and inflammatory chemokine expression. A significant reduction in Klotho mRNA and protein expression was observed in kidneys from hypercholesteromic ApoE KO mice fed a HC diet as compared with controls, both at 5 and 10 weeks. In order to study the mechanism involved in Klotho down-regulation, murine tubular epithelial cells were treated with ox-LDL. Oxidized-LDL were effectively uptaken by tubular cells and decreased both Klotho mRNA and protein expression in a time- and dose-dependent manner in these cells. Finally, NF-κB and ERK inhibitors prevented ox-LDL-induced Klotho downregulation.
Conclusion: Our results suggest that hyperlipidemia-associated kidney injury decreases renal expression of Klotho. Therefore, Klotho could be a key element explaining the relationship between hyperlipidemia and aging with renal disease.