Science and Research

Myeloid CCR2 Promotes Atherosclerosis after Acute Kidney Injury

Background: The risk of cardiovascular events rises after acute kidney injury. Leukocytes promote atherosclerotic plaque growth and instability. We have established a model of enhanced remote atherosclerosis after renal ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury and investigate the underlying inflammatory mechanisms. Methods: Atherosclerotic lesions and inflammation were investigated in native and bone marrow-transplanted LDL receptor-deficient (LDLr(-/-) ) mice after unilateral renal IR injury using histology, flow cytometry, and gene expression analysis. Results: Aortic root atherosclerotic lesions were significantly larger after renal IR injury than in controls. A gene expression screen revealed enrichment for chemokines and their cognate receptors in aortas of IR-injured mice in early atherosclerosis, and of T cell-associated genes in advanced disease . Confocal microscopy revealed increased aortic macrophage proximity to T cells. Differential aortic inflammatory gene regulation in IR-injured mice largely paralleled the pattern in the injured kidney. Single-cell analysis identified renal cell types that produced soluble mediators upregulated in the atherosclerotic aorta. The analysis revealed a marked early increase in Ccl2, which CCR2+ myeloid cells mainly expressed. CCR2 mediated myeloid cell homing to the post-ischemic kidney in a cell-individual manner. Reconstitution with Ccr2(-/-) bone marrow dampened renal post-ischemic inflammation, reduced aortic Ccl2 and inflammatory macrophage marker CD11c, and abrogated excess aortic atherosclerotic plaque formation after renal IR. Conclusions: Our data introduce an experimental model of remote proatherogenic effects of renal IR and delineate myeloid CCR2 signaling as a mechanistic requirement. Monocytes should be considered as mobile mediators when addressing systemic vascular sequelae of kidney injury.

  • Hüsing, A.
  • Wulfmeyer, V.
  • Gaedcke, S.
  • Fleig, S.
  • Rong, S.
  • DeLuca, D.
  • Haller, H.
  • Schmitt, R.
  • von Vietinghoff, S.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1681/asn.2022010048
Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: PLB
Partner / Member: MHH
Access-Number: 35537780

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