Interleukin-17A blockade reduces albuminuria and kidney injury in an accelerated model of diabetic nephropathy
Entity
UAM. Departamento de MedicinaPublisher
Elsevier Inc.Date
2019-03-08Citation
10.1016/ j.kint.2018.12.031
Kidney International 95 (2019): 1418–1432
ISSN
0085-2538 (print); 1523-1755 (online)DOI
10.1016/ j.kint.2018.12.031Funded by
This work was supported by grants PAI 82140017 to CL; Fondecyt 1160465 to SM; Division of Nephrology, Universidad Austral de Chile, the Instituto de Salud Carlos III and FEDER European Union funds (PI14/00041, PI17/00119 to MR-O, and PI14/00386 and PI17/01495 to JE); Red de Investigación Renal (REDinREN; RD16/009) and Comunidad de Madrid (B2017/BMD-3751 NOVELREN-CM) to MR-O, and Sociedad Española de NefrologíaProject
Gobierno de España. PI14/00041; Gobierno de España. PI17/00119; Gobierno de España. PI14/00386; Gobierno de España. PI17/01495; Comunidad de Madrid. B2017/BMD-3751/NOVELRENEditor's Version
https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.kint.2018.12.031Subjects
BTBR ob/ob; Diabetic nephropathy; IL-17A; Inflammation; MedicinaRights
© 2019 International Society of Nephrology
Esta obra está bajo una licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 4.0 Internacional.
Abstract
Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is one of the most common
complications of diabetes, and currently the first end-stage
renal disease worldwide. New strategies to treat DN using
agents that target inflammatory pathways have attracted
special interest. Recent pieces of evidences suggest a
promising effect of IL-17A, the Th17 effector cytokine.
Among experimental DN models, mouse strain BTBR ob/ob
(leptin deficiency mutation) develops histological features
similar to human DN, which means an opportunity to study
mechanisms and novel therapies aimed at DN regression.
We found that BTBR ob/ob mice presented renal activation
of the factors controlling Th17 differentiation. The presence
of IL-17A-expressing cells, mainly CD4D and gd
lymphocytes, was associated with upregulation of
proinflammatory factors, macrophage infiltration and the
beginning of renal damage. To study IL-17A involvement in
experimental DN pathogenesis, treatment with an IL-17A
neutralizing antibody was carried out starting when the
renal damage had already appeared. IL-17A blockade
ameliorated renal dysfunction and disease progression in
BTBR ob/ob mice. These beneficial effects correlated to
podocyte number restoration and inhibition of NF-kB/
proinflammatory factors linked to a decrease in renal
inflammatory-cell infiltration. These data demonstrate that
IL-17A takes part in diabetes-mediated renal damage and
could be a promising therapeutic target to improve DN.
Files in this item

Google Scholar:Lavoz, Carolina
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Sánchez Matus, Yenniffer
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Orejudo, Macarena
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Carpio, J. Daniel
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Droguett, Alejandra
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Egido, Jesús
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Mezzano, Sergio
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Ruiz-Ortega, Marta
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Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Fundación Jiménez Díaz (ISS-FJD)
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