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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Contribution of myeloid HO-1 to the modulation of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury: Effect of myeloid HO-1 induction with hemin as a preemptive treatment strategy against renal ischemia-reperfusion injury

Rossi, Maxime 17 December 2020 (has links) (PDF)
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a major public health concern, which contributes to serious hospital complications, chronic kidney disease (CKD) and even death. Renal ischemia- reperfusion injury (IRI) remains a leading cause of AKI.IRI combines major cell stress, significant burst of free radicals, and strong inflammatory responses leading to extensive cell injury, necrosis, and late interstitial fibrosis. Moreover, IRI- induced AKI releases pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g. IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6) that induce a systemic inflammatory response, resulting in pro-inflammatory cells recruitment and remote organ damage. AKI is associated with poor outcomes, particularly when extrarenal complications or distant organ injuries occur.The stress-responsive enzyme, heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) mediates protection against renal IRI and may be preventively induced using hemin prior to renal insult. This HO-1 induction pathway called hemin preconditioning is largely known in the literature to be effective.We first confirmed that hemin-induced HO-1 improved renal outcomes after IRI (i.e. fewer renal damage, renal inflammation and oxidative stress). We then demonstrated that this protective pathway mitigated AKI-induced ALI, a major extrarenal complication after renal IRI, through modulation of systemic and lung inflammation.Afterwards, we focused on the specific contribution of myeloid HO-1 to renal IRI, which remains poorly characterized. We therefore investigated the contribution of myeloid HO-1 to renal IRI using mice with myeloid-restricted deletion of HO-1 (HO-1M-KO). We observed that myeloid HO-1 appeared to be a critical regulator of the earliest phases of IRI (i.e. higher plasma creatinine, tubular damage, and renal inflammation/oxidative stress in HO-1M-KO mice).As a link between the severity of renal injury and the risk maladaptive repair leading to CKD has been established, we thereby decided to focus on tubular repair and fibrosis deposition upon IRI. We identified that myeloid HO-1 prevented maladaptive repair and subsequent CKD through modulation of cell-cycle and autophagy regulatory proteins.We then showed that hemin-mediated protection requires specific expression of HO-1 within myeloid cells. We therefore identified CD11b+ F4/80lo macrophages as the main protective myeloid source of HO-1 upon renal IRI. Interestingly, we observed this myeloid cell sub- population in the kidney and spleen, suggesting that protective effects might be provided by both tissue-resident and infiltrating/circulating HO-1+ myeloid cells.Based on its promising cytoprotective effects when giving preemptively, we investigated the use of hemin-induced myeloid HO-1 as a strategy to mitigate established AKI. However, due to its chemical structure and oxidative properties, hemin worsened IRI-induced AKI. We thereby identified that hemin had a dual effect on renal IRI, protective or deleterious, depending on the timing of its administration.Altogether, this work suggests that myeloid HO-1 plays a critical role in the modulation of IRI- induced AKI by improving short- and long-term functional outcomes after renal IRI. We conclude that hemin-induced myeloid HO-1 pathway might be an efficient preventive strategy in many renal IRI situations with predictable AKI such as renal transplantation or partial nephrectomy. / Doctorat en Sciences médicales (Médecine) / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
2

L'alarmine IL-33, un médiateur clé des phénomènes d'ischémie-reperfusion rénale mettant en jeu les cellules iNKT / The alarmin IL-33 is a key mediator of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury by promoting iNKT cell recruitment and function

Ferhat, Maroua 11 July 2017 (has links)
Le syndrome d'ischémie-reperfusion (IR), inhérent à la transplantation rénale, est caractérisé par un infiltrat leucocytaire important et des lésions tissulaires graves dont les signaux initiateurs restent à ce jour peu décrits. Postulant que la libération d'alarmines par les cellules en nécrose est décisive dans ce processus, l'objectif principal du présent travail a été d'étudier la contribution de l'alarmine IL-33 dans la genèse des lésions tissulaires dans un modèle murin d'IR rénale. Nos résultats montrent que l'IL-33 est rapidement libérée du rein après IR comme protéine circulante, dès une heure de reperfusion. Les souris IL-33gt/gt, déficientes en IL-33, sont moins sensibles aux lésions induites par l’IR, comme l'attestent le maintien de la fonction rénale et des lésions histologiques atténuées avec un recrutement de polynucléaires neutrophiles (PNN) diminué par rapport aux souris contrôles. Ceci est associé à la perte du recrutement de cellules iNKT productrices d'IFN-γ/IL-17A. Parallèlement, les souris Jα18KO, déficientes en cellules iNKT et protégées contre les lésions d'IR, possèdent également des niveaux élevés d'IL-33 circulante. Nous proposons donc que l'IL-33 endogène contribue aux lésions d'IR en favorisant le recrutement de cellules iNKT, conduisant ainsi à un recrutement amplifié de PNN au niveau du rein lésé. Notre étude, en identifiant l'alarmine IL-33 comme un médiateur précoce de la réponse immunitaire innée induite par l'IR rénale, mettant en jeu les cellules iNKT, contribue à la compréhension des mécanismes impliqués dans la genèse des lésions associées à la greffe rénale et permet de proposer de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutiques. / Ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury in renal transplantation is characterized by leukocyte infiltration and tissue damage. However, the signals that initiate these events remain poorly understood. Assuming that alarmin release by necrotic cells during IRI is critical, the main objective of the present study was to investigate the role of alarmin IL-33 in kidney injury using a mouse model of renal IR. We observed release of IL-33 shortly after kidney IR concomitantly with an increase in plasma levels of IL-33 within one hour of reperfusion. IL-33 deficient mice (IL-33gt/gt) exhibited reduced renal IR-induced injury, as attested by function preservation, reduced histological change and attenuation of neutrophil recruitment compared to control mice. This was associated with the loss of IFN-γ/IL-17A-producing iNKT cell recruitment. In the meantime, iNKT cell-deficient (Jα18KO) mice, also protected against IRI, have increased levels of circulating IL-33.These findings lead us to propose that endogenous IL-33 contributes to kidney IRI by promoting iNKT cell recruitment and cytokine production, thereby promoting amplified neutrophil recruitment to the injured kidney. The present study identifies the nuclear alarmin interleukin (IL)-33 as an important and early mediator of innate immune response, involving iNKT cells, following experimental kidney ischemia-reperfusion in mice. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of IR-induced injury and may lead to new therapeutic insights into renal-induced injury associated with renal transplantation.

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