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Castrated Autoimmune Glomerulonephritis Mouse Model Shows Attenuated Glomerular Sclerosis with Altered Parietal Epithelial Cell Phenotype

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Specialty Biology
Date 2021 Mar 1
PMID 33641441
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Abstract

Sex hormones help in maintaining proper immunity as well as renal homeostasis in mammals, and these multi-functional properties characterize the onset of sex-dependent diseases. To clarify the contribution of sex hormones to autoimmune disease-related renal pathogenesis, BXSB/MpJ- was investigated as a murine autoimmune glomerulonephritis model. BXSB/MpJ- and its wild-type, BXSB/MpJ- were castrated or sham-operated at three weeks and examined until six months of age. Both castrated strains showed significantly lower serum testosterone levels and body weights than sham-operated mice. Castration did not change the disease phenotypes in BXSB/MpJ-. At three months, both sham-operated and castrated BXSB/MpJ- manifested splenomegaly, autoantibody production, and glomerulonephritis, and castrated BXSB/MpJ- tended to show heavier spleen weights than the sham-operated group. At six months, both the treated BXSB/MpJ- showed equivalent autoimmune disease conditions; however, castrated mice clearly showed milder glomerular sclerotic lesions than the sham-operated groups. Urinary albumin excretion in castrated BXSB/MpJ- was significantly milder than in sham-operated mice at four months, but those of both the treated BXSB/MpJ- were comparable at six months. The examined renal histopathological indices in parietal epithelial cells were remarkably altered by castration. Briefly, castration decreased the height of parietal epithelial cells and total parietal epithelial cell number in BXSB/MpJ- at six months. For immunostaining, parietal epithelial cells facing the injured glomeruli of BXSB/MpJ- expressed CD44, an activated parietal epithelial cell marker, and CD44-positive parietal epithelial cells showed nuclear localization of the androgen receptor and proliferation marker Ki67. CD44- or Ki67-positive parietal epithelial cells were significantly fewer in castrated group than in sham-operated BXSB/MpJ- at six months. Further, quantitative indices for CD44-positive parietal epithelial cell number and frequency in renal corpuscles positively correlated with glomerular sclerotic severity in BXSB/MpJ-. In conclusion, androgen seemed to have an effect on both systemic immunity and renal morpho-function; however, the effect on the latter could be more clearly observed in BXSB/MpJ-, as parietal epithelial cell activation resulted in glomerular sclerosis.

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