Activin A Antagonism with Follistatin Reduces Kidney Fibrosis, Injury, and Cellular Senescence-Associated Inflammation in Murine Diabetic Kidney Disease
- PMID: 40152935
- PMCID: PMC12407135
- DOI: 10.34067/KID.0000000776
Activin A Antagonism with Follistatin Reduces Kidney Fibrosis, Injury, and Cellular Senescence-Associated Inflammation in Murine Diabetic Kidney Disease
Abstract
Key Points:
Activin A is implicated in profibrotic and prosenescent kidney injury and correlates with kidney injury markers in animals and humans.
Follistatin, through activin A antagonism, reduces senescence burden, macrophage infiltration, and proinflammatory pathway activation in murine diabetic kidney disease.
Follistatin and other antagonists of activin A signaling pathways may be promising, novel therapeutics for diabetic kidney disease.
Background: Circulating activin A, an inflammatory mediator implicated in profibrotic kidney injury and cellular senescence-induced adipose tissue dysfunction, is increased in human diabetic kidney disease (DKD) and directly correlates with kidney dysfunction. We tested the hypothesis that activin A increases kidney injury, senescent cell abundance, and macrophage infiltration in DKD and antagonism through follistatin (FS) therapy diminishes these effects.
Methods: An accelerated nephropathy type 2 diabetes (db/db) mouse model was generated by implantation of angiotensin II-loaded osmotic minipumps resulting in increased albuminuria and glomerular and tubular injury. Kidney repair effects of FS (5 µg intraperitoneal; two doses) were assessed through markers of kidney injury, fibrosis, inflammation, cellular senescence, and macrophage infiltration. In vitro studies examined antiactivin effects of FS on high glucose-exposed human monocytes, renal fibroblasts, and renal tubule epithelial cells.
Results: Activin A antagonism with FS reduced senescence (p19), proinflammatory (including senescence-associated secretory phenotype), and profibrotic markers including activin A. FS improved kidney morphology, restored podocyte markers (nephrin and Wilms tumor-1), and reduced kidney injury biomarkers, albuminuria and kidney fibrosis. FS decreased kidney macrophage and leukocyte infiltration and absent in melanoma 2 inflammasome activation. FS seemed to suppress inflammation through the toll-like receptor-4/NF kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells pathway in vivo further supported in human macrophages in vitro. In addition, FS reduced hyperglycemia-induced renal fibroblast activation and renal tubule epithelial cell senescence in vitro.
Conclusions: Activin A is a mediator of kidney injury through macrophage-associated inflammation in murine DKD. FS acts through senomorphic activities which inhibit profibrotic, proinflammatory, and prosenescence signaling by activin A. Hence, antiactivin targeting may aid in the development of a promising, novel therapeutic for DKD.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01519349 NCT02354781 NCT02262455 NCT02848131 NCT03325322.
Keywords: chronic inflammation; diabetic nephropathy; fibronectin; lymphocytes; macrophages; podocyte; renal fibrosis; renal protection; renal proximal tubule cell.
Conflict of interest statement
Disclosure forms, as provided by each author, are available with the online version of the article at
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- AG076537/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- NIH AG013925/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- AG076537/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States
- K08 DK118120/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- DK101405/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- DK115255/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- DK123492/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- DK109134/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- DK07013/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- R03 DK123492/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- HL158691/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- R01 AG013925/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States
- DK076169/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- R01 AG076537/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States
- K23 DK109134/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- R01 HL158691/HL/NHLBI NIH HHS/United States
- U24 DK076169/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- RMM 091718CT/Regenerative Medicine Minnesota
- U24 DK115255/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- R37 AG013925/AG/NIA NIH HHS/United States
- DK118120/NH/NIH HHS/United States
- T32 DK007013/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- R25 DK101405/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- R01 DK120292/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- DK120292/NH/NIH HHS/United States
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