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Publication : Endothelial cell transforming growth factor-β receptor activation causes tacrolimus-induced renal arteriolar hyalinosis.

First Author  Chiasson VL Year  2012
Journal  Kidney Int Volume  82
Issue  8 Pages  857-66
PubMed ID  22495293 Mgi Jnum  J:198179
Mgi Id  MGI:5495623 Doi  10.1038/ki.2012.104
Citation  Chiasson VL, et al. (2012) Endothelial cell transforming growth factor-beta receptor activation causes tacrolimus-induced renal arteriolar hyalinosis. Kidney Int 82(8):857-66
abstractText  Arteriolar hyalinosis is a common histological finding in renal transplant recipients treated with the calcineurin inhibitor tacrolimus; however, the pathophysiologic mechanisms remain unknown. In addition to increasing transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta levels, tacrolimus inhibits calcineurin by binding to FK506-binding protein 12 (FKBP12). FKBP12 alone also inhibits TGF-beta receptor activation. Here we tested whether tacrolimus binding to FKBP12 removes an inhibition of the TGF-beta receptor, allowing ligand binding, ultimately leading to receptor activation and arteriolar hyalinosis. We found that specific deletion of FKBP12 from endothelial cells was sufficient to activate endothelial TGF-beta receptors and induce renal arteriolar hyalinosis in these knockout mice, similar to that induced by tacrolimus. Tacrolimus-treated and knockout mice exhibited significantly increased levels of aortic TGF-beta receptor activation as evidenced by SMAD2/3 phosphorylation, along with increased collagen and fibronectin expression compared to controls. Treatment of isolated mouse aortas with tacrolimus increased TGF-beta receptor activation and collagen and fibronectin expression. These effects were independent of calcineurin, absent in endothelial denuded aortic rings, and could be prevented by the small molecule TGF-beta receptor inhibitor SB-505124. Thus, endothelial cell TGF-beta receptor activation is sufficient to cause vascular remodeling and renal arteriolar hyalinosis.
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