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The Mannose-Binding Lectin-Pathway Is Involved in Complement Activation in the Course of Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

de Vries, Bart; Walter, Sarah J.; Peutz-Kootstra, Carine J.; Wolfs, Tim G.A.M.; van Heurn, L.W. Ernest; Buurman, Wim A.
American Journal of Pathology , Volume 165 (5): 1677 American Society for Investigative PathologyNov 1, 2004

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The Mannose-Binding Lectin-Pathway Is Involved in Complement Activation in the Course of Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

Abstract

Ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) is an important cause of acute renal failure (ARF). The complement system appears to be essentially involved in I/R injury. However, via which pathway the complement system is activated and in particular whether the mannose-binding lectin (MBL)-pathway is activated is unclear. This tempted us to study the activation and regulation of the MBL-pathway in the course of experimental renal I/R injury and in clinical post-transplant ARF. Mice subjected to renal I/R displayed evident renal MBL-depositions, depending on the duration of warm ischemia, in the early reperfusion phase. Renal deposition of C3, C6 and C9 was observed in the later reperfusion phase. The deposition of MBL-A and -C completely co-localized with the late complement factor C6, showing that MBL is involved in complement activation in the course of renal I/R injury. Moreover, the degree of early MBL-deposition correlated with complement activation, neutrophil-influx, and organ-failure observed in the later reperfusion phase. In serum of mice subjected to renal I/R MBL-A, levels increased in contrast to MBL-C levels, which dropped evidently. In line, liver mRNA levels for MBL-A increased, whereas MBL-C levels decreased. Renal MBL mRNA levels rapidly dropped in the course of renal I/R. Finally, in human biopsies, MBL-depositions were observed early after transplantation of ischemically injured kidneys. In line with our experimental data, in ischemically injured grafts displaying post-transplant organ-failure extensive MBL depositions were observed in peritubular capillaries and tubular epithelial cells. In conclusion, in experimental renal I/R injury and clinical post-transplant ARF the MBL-pathway is activated, followed by activation of the complement system. These data indicate that the MBL-pathway is involved in ischemia-induced complement activation.
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Title
The Mannose-Binding Lectin-Pathway Is Involved in Complement Activation in the Course of Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury
Author(s)
de Vries, Bart; Walter, Sarah J.; Peutz-Kootstra, Carine J.; Wolfs, Tim G.A.M.; van Heurn, L.W. Ernest; Buurman, Wim A.
Journal
American Journal of Pathology , Volume 165 (5): 1677 American Society for Investigative Pathology – Nov 1, 2004
Publisher
ASIP
Copyright
Copyright © 2004 by the American Society for Investigative Pathology.
ISSN
0002-9440
eISSN
1525-2191
Publisher site
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