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Publication : Efficient renal recruitment of macrophages and T cells in mice lacking the duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines.

First Author  Vielhauer V Year  2009
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  175
Issue  1 Pages  119-31
PubMed ID  19498001 Mgi Jnum  J:150059
Mgi Id  MGI:3849633 Doi  10.2353/ajpath.2009.080590
Citation  Vielhauer V, et al. (2009) Efficient renal recruitment of macrophages and T cells in mice lacking the duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines. Am J Pathol 175(1):119-31
abstractText  The Duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines (DARC) is a chemokine-binding protein that is expressed on erythrocytes and renal endothelial cells. DARC-mediated endothelial transcytosis of chemokines may facilitate the renal recruitment of macrophages and T cells, as has been suggested for neutrophils. We studied the role of Darc in two mouse models of prolonged renal inflammation, one that primarily involves the tubulointerstitium (unilateral ureteral obstruction), and one that requires an adaptive immune response that leads to glomerulonephritis (accelerated nephrotoxic nephritis). Renal expression of Darc and its ligands was increased in both models. Leukocytes effectively infiltrated obstructed kidneys in Darc-deficient mice with pronounced T-cell infiltration at early time points. Development of interstitial fibrosis was comparable in both genotypes. Nephrotoxic nephritis was inducible in Darc-deficient mice, with both an increased humoral immune response and functional impairment during the early phase of disease. Leukocytes efficiently infiltrated kidneys of Darc-deficient mice, with increased cell numbers at early but not late time points. Taken together, renal inflammation developed more rapidly in DARC-deficient mice, without affecting the extent of renal injury at later time points. Thus, genetic elimination of Darc in mice does not prevent the development of renal infiltrates and may even enhance such development during the early phases of interstitial and glomerular diseases in mouse models of prolonged renal inflammation.
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