塔姆-霍斯法尔蛋白
细胞生物学
肾
生物
适应(眼睛)
线粒体
RNA剪接
新陈代谢
化学
生物化学
遗传学
核糖核酸
基因
神经科学
作者
Azuma Nanamatsu,George Rhodes,Kaice A. LaFavers,Radmila Micanovic,Virginie Lazar,Shehnaz Khan,Daria Barwinska,Shin‐ichi Makino,Amy Zollman,Ying‐Hua Cheng,Emma H. Doud,Amber L. Mosley,Matthew J. Repass,Malgorzata M. Kamocka,Aravind Baride,Carrie L. Phillips,Katherine J. Kelly,Michael T. Eadon,Jonathan Himmelfarb,Matthias Kretzler
摘要
In the kidney, cells of thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle (TAL) are resistant to ischemic injury, despite high energy demands. This adaptive metabolic response is not fully understood even though the integrity of TAL cells is essential for recovery from acute kidney injury (AKI). TAL cells uniquely express uromodulin, the most abundant protein secreted in healthy urine. Here, we demonstrate that alternative splicing generates a conserved intracellular isoform of uromodulin, which contributes to metabolic adaptation of TAL cells. This splice variant was induced by oxidative stress and was up-regulated by AKI that is associated with recovery, but not by severe AKI and chronic kidney disease (CKD). This intracellular variant was targeted to the mitochondria, increased NAD+ and ATP levels, and protected TAL cells from hypoxic injury. Augmentation of this variant using antisense oligonucleotides after severe AKI improved the course of injury. These findings underscore an important role of condition-specific alternative splicing in adaptive energy metabolism to hypoxic stress. Enhancing this protective splice variant in TAL cells could become a novel therapeutic intervention for AKI.
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