Heme oxygenase-1 in renal injury: Conclusions of studies in humans and animal models

Heme oxygenase-1 in renal injury: Conclusions of studies in humans and animal models

Kidney International, Vol. 59 (2001), pp. 378–379 EDITORIAL Heme oxygenase-1 in renal injury: Conclusions of studies in humans and animal models Hem...

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Kidney International, Vol. 59 (2001), pp. 378–379

EDITORIAL

Heme oxygenase-1 in renal injury: Conclusions of studies in humans and animal models Heme, a ferroprotoporphyrin, derived from various hemoproteins, is catabolized by the enzyme heme oxygenase [1–4]. It degrades heme to biliverdin, which is metabolized by biliverdin reductase to bilirubin. The catabolism of heme to biliverdin by heme oxygenase requires oxygen and the reduced form of nicotinamideadenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH). During this reaction iron is released from the heme ring and carbon monoxide is produced. Heme oxygenase activity is confined to its three isoenzymes: HO-1, HO-2, and HO-3. HO-1 is the isoenzyme induced in tissues by various stimuli, a large number of which are pro-oxidant. During the last decade, there has been a tremendous interest in the biology of HO-1, in part because it serves as a fortuitous protective agent as opposed to the deleterious effects exerted by the degradation products of its substrate, heme, in various forms of tissue injury [2, 3]. The mechanisms relevant to the protective effects of HO-1 in human renal disease, reinforced in animal studies, are highlighted in this issue of Kidney International by Nath et al [5]. The studies described herein [5] represent a continuum of intense efforts launched in Dr. Nath’s laboratory a decade ago to delineate the mechanism(s) of renal injury and responses to such injury in the kidney exposed to heme proteins [5–13]. In 1992, he and his colleagues demonstrated that exposure to heme proteins produces a rapid increase in the expression of HO-1 and ferritin, and such an induction provides a protective response to renal tubular injury [6]. These studies represent a landmark contribution because they provide the first demonstration—in any tissue and for any insult and in either in vitro or in vivo settings—for a protective role of HO-1, a role only previously theorized for this enzyme [1]. Further strides were made to delineate the mechanism(s) by which induced HO-1 provided protection against the oxidant injury to the kidney. The authors explored the mechanisms by which heme proteins induced renal vasoconstriction [7, 8] and also identified the renal intracellular targets vulnerable to the deleterious effects of such toxic proteins [7, 9]. In addition, they Key words: nuclear factor-␬B (NF-␬B) heme proteins, tubulointerstitial injury, fibrogenic cytokines inflammatory response, monocyte chemoattractant peptide (MCP-1).

 2001 by the International Society of Nephrology

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demonstrated that cytoprotection against heme protein– induced toxicity can occur even when HO-1 is induced by agents such as an endotoxin [10] or by the administration of heterologous antibody as in nephrotoxic serum nephritis [11]. More recently, they confirmed the role of this enzyme in HO-1–deficient mice stressed with heme proteins. These mice exhibited severe renal insufficiency and increased mortality [12]. Nath et al extended the above studies to explore whether HO-1 protected against the inflammatory assault by heme proteins in the HO-1–deficient mice in a clinical setting. The impetus for the studies described in the accompanying article was a patient with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria who developed progressive chronic tubulointerstitial disease with up-regulation of HO-1 in the kidney and in renal tubular cells exposed to patient’s urine. In previous studies in rats, Nath and colleagues had demonstrated a triphasic response in the kidney exposed to heme proteins. Initially, kidneys exhibit acute sensitivity to hemoproteins, followed by acquisition of resistance to them, and finally a progressive tubulointerstitial disease with up-regulation of inflammatory and fibrogenic cytokines [13]. Based on this information, they explored the status of HO-1 in various phases and devised a regimen that used sufficiently low doses of murine hemoglobin so that its repeated administration caused minimal mortality in HO-1–deficient mice. An acute sensitivity was noted both in wild-type and HO-1–deficient mice with the initial doses of hemoglobin, and eventually both the strains developed resistance as well to heme proteins. Remarkably, the response differed in the third phase. HO-1–deficient mice had marked exacerbation of tubulointerstitial disease, suggesting that the capacity to recruit HO-1, as it occurs in wild-type mice, provides a mechanism that holds in check the inflammatory response induced by heme proteins. To delineate the mechanism involved, they focused on the monocyte chemoattractant peptide (MCP-1), since the latter contributes to progressive tubulointerstitial injury [14] as a redox-sensitive gene. Novel data emerged from the experiments. A relatively very high up-regulation of MCP-1 in the kidney was observed in HO-deficient mice with repeated chronic administration of hemoglobin. Concomitantly, nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-␬B), a transcription factor that induces the expression of

Editorial

MCP-1, was avidly activated in the HO-1–deficient mice. This implied that HO-1 down-regulates MCP-1 by inhibiting the activation of NF-␬B. These findings clearly demonstrate that the induction of HO-1 serves as an adaptive response in the kidney subjected to repeated chronic exposure of heme proteins. The response thus restrains inflammation, which otherwise, in the absence of HO-1, would be markedly enhanced in addition to uncontrolled induction of NF-␬B and MCP-1. These studies suggest that HO-1 acts as a protectant not only during the acute phase of nephrotoxicity but also in the chronic inflammatory damage induced by heme proteins. The novel role HO-1 as a suppressor of inflammatory responses, mediated in part by in vivo down-regulating the expression of MCP-1, is further underscored in several other disease settings as well, for example, in acute pleurisy [15], xenotransplant rejection [16], transplant vasculopathy [17], and hyperoxic lung injury [18]. The present study also raises the question, What other cytokines and pro-inflammatory species are influenced by HO-1? Equally important is the molecular basis for the anti-inflammatory effect of HO-1 in the described model. Each of the products of HO-1—ferritin, bilirubin, and carbon monoxide—may exert cytoprotective and/or anti-inflammatory effects, and it would be interesting to determine which of these products are involved in exerting such anti-inflammatory effects in these settings. Nath and his colleagues previously speculated that heme proteins contributed to the progressive tubulointerstitial disease in hematuric glomerulonephritides. In such a scenario, the heme proteins are brought into tubular epithelial cells as a consequence of the incorporation and degradation of erythrocytes by the renal tubular epithelium, which then lead to a tubulointerstitial injury [19]. These findings, that there was an intense up-regulation of MCP-1 in heme-induced renal injury, point toward the molecular basis by which such an inflammatory damage ensues. In conclusion, the studies by Nath and his colleagues provide novel concepts regarding the understanding of the pathogenesis of tubulointerstitial injury, where HO-1 acts as a suppressor of an inflammatory response in the kidney repetitively exposed to heme proteins. This suppressive effect of HO-1 on inflammatory responses may relate to the capacity of HO-1 to suppress the chemokine, MCP-1, possibly through the antioxidant effect of HO-1 retarding the activation of the redox-sensitive transcription factor, NF-␬B. Importantly, heme proteins strongly up-regulate the chemokine, MCP-1, thereby uncovering such a stimulus for this chemokine. Moreover, the upregulated renal HO-1/ferritin expression in the patient repeatedly exposed to heme proteins during the course of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria attests to the original contention enunciated by Nath and colleagues, that is, that HO-1 and ferritin are induced in the kidney in response to the stress by hemoproteins [6]. Finally, this study, representing a combination of clinical and

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experimental observations, demonstrates how the exploration of a human disease process can provide important insights and engender important questions that can be analyzed using genetically engineered mice. Yashpal S. Kanwar Chicago, Illinois, USA Correspondence to Yashpal S. Kanwar, M.D., Ph.D., Department of Pathology, Northwestern University Medical School, 303 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA. E-mail: [email protected]

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