grant

Mechanisms of intracellular iron dysregulation in kidney fibrosis and reno-protective strategies

Organization WEILL MEDICAL COLL OF CORNELL UNIVLocation NEW YORK, UNITED STATESPosted 5 Sept 2024Deadline 31 Aug 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20241H-Purin-6-amineAbscissionAccountingAddressAdenineAffectAlport syndromeAlport syndrome (AS, ATS)Alport syndrome-like hereditary nephritisAlport syndrome-like hereditary nephritis (ASLHN, ASLN)Alport's SyndromeAmericanAnemiaAutoregulationBiological MarkersBody TissuesCell BodyCell Culture TechniquesCell DeathCell IsolationCell ProtectionCell SegregationCell SeparationCell Separation TechnologyCell SurvivalCell ViabilityCellsCeruloplasminCeruloplasmin FerroxidaseCeruloplasmin OxidaseCessation of lifeChronic Kidney FailureChronic Renal DiseaseChronic Renal FailureCoupledCritical PathsCritical PathwaysCytoprotectionDataDeathDevelopmentDialysisDialysis procedureDickinson syndromeDisease ProgressionDissociationDysfunctionEnzyme GeneEnzymesEpithelial CellsExcisionExtirpationFamilial NephritisFe chelationFe elementFe metabolismFe overloadFe supplementationFerridextranFerritinFerroxidaseFibrosisFlow CytofluorometriesFlow CytofluorometryFlow CytometryFlow MicrofluorimetryFlow MicrofluorometryFluorescent ProbesFunctional disorderGoalsH ferritinHereditary nephritisHomeostasisInjuryIronIron ChelatesIron Chelating AgentsIron ChelationIron OverloadIron chelatorIron dextranIron-Dextran ComplexKO miceKidneyKidney DiseasesKidney FailureKidney GraftingKidney InsufficiencyKidney TransplantationKidney TransplantsKidney TubulesKidney Urinary SystemKnock-outKnock-out MiceKnockoutKnockout MiceKnowledgeMacrophageMiceMice MammalsModelingMurineMusMutant Strains MiceNephropathyNull MouseOxidation-ReductionPathway interactionsPatientsPersonsPhysiological HomeostasisPhysiopathologyPopulationProteinsProtocolProtocols documentationRedoxRegulationRemovalRenal DiseaseRenal FailureRenal GraftingRenal InsufficiencyRenal TransplantationRenal TransplantsRenal tubule structureRoleSurgical RemovalTechniquesTestingTherapeuticTissuesToxic effectToxicitiesTubularTubular formationUreteral obstructionVitamin B4Workalpha(2)-Ceruloplasminbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkercell culturecell culturescell sortingchelationchronic kidney diseasecongenital hereditary hematuriacytoprotectivedeafness-nephritis syndromedevelopmentaldialysis therapyeffective therapyeffective treatmentexperimentexperimental researchexperimental studyexperimentsferroportinferroportin1 proteinflow cytophotometryhearing loss-nephritis syndromehematuria-nephropathy-deafness syndromehematuric familial nephropathyhematuric hereditary nephritishemorrhagic familial nephritishemorrhagic hereditary nephritishereditary familial congenital hemorrhagic nephritishereditary hematuria syndromehereditary interstitial pyelonephritishereditary nephritis-deafness syndromehereditary nephritis-deafness-abnormal thrombogenesis syndromeimprovedin vivoinjuriesinsightiron metabolismiron supplementationkidney biopsykidney disorderkidney fibrosiskidney txmetal transporting protein 1mouse modelmouse mutantmurine modelnecrocytosisnew drug targetnew druggable targetnew pharmacotherapy targetnew therapeutic approachnew therapeutic interventionnew therapeutic strategiesnew therapeutic targetnew therapy approachesnew therapy targetnew treatment approachnew treatment strategynovelnovel drug targetnovel druggable targetnovel pharmacotherapy targetnovel therapeutic approachnovel therapeutic interventionnovel therapeutic strategiesnovel therapeutic targetnovel therapy approachnovel therapy targetoxidation reduction reactionpathophysiologypathwaypreventpreventingrenalrenal biopsyrenal disorderrenal fibrosisrenal tubuleresectionresponsesocial rolesolute carrier family 40 (iron-regulated transporter), member 1therapeutic targetureter obstruction
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Full Description

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 10-15% of the population worldwide. More than 37 million people are estimated to have CKD in the US, and 2 in every 1000 Americans need dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive. Anemia and dysfunctional iron homeostasis frequently complicate CKD. Kidney fibrosis is the final mechanism common for all progressive kidney disorders leading to CKD.

However, very few therapies are available to slow the progression of kidney fibrosis in CKD patients. Our long-term goal is to identify novel actionable drivers of kidney fibrosis, so that they can be therapeutically targeted to delay progression of CKD. Proximal tubular epithelial cells represent the key cell population implicated in the pathophysiology of kidney fibrosis and may accumulate iron in CKD. The overall objective of this proposal is to define the role of iron homeostasis in responses of these cells to fibrosis, which are responsible for CKD progression.

Based on our preliminary data, we hypothesize that in CKD, tubular cells are highly sensitive to labile iron. Nonetheless, the following two cytoprotective mechanisms initially limit tubular iron toxicity in CKD by preventing an uncontrolled expansion of the tubular labile iron pool: (1) induction of tubular iron export and (2) induction of intracellular storage of iron within the tubular cells. We expect that these protective mechanisms fail during iron supplementation unless they are enhanced therapeutically. This hypothesis will be tested in two sets of experiments that will increase or decrease labile iron pool in tubular cells, and we will define the consequential changes of tubular injury, survival, and fibrosis that constitute the disease progression.

Studies will be facilitated by induction of CKD in our mutant mice lacking critical iron-related proteins in proximal tubules (ferritin-H, responsible for iron storage and ferroportin, responsible for iron removal from cells) and established protocols for iron supplementation, restriction, and conservative therapeutic chelation. Successful completion of this work is expected to elucidate the fundamental mechanisms of intracellular iron regulation in the kidney, which are critical for kidney fibrosis propagation and will identify approaches capable of influencing cellular catalytic iron as a novel therapeutic target. Thus, the proposed work addresses a critical lack of knowledge essential for the development of new therapeutic approaches to iron homeostasis, which are on the critical path to halting CKD progression in patients.

Grant Number: 1R56DK136876-01A1
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Oleh Akchurin

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