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Inhibition of cell surface GRP78 and activated α2M interaction attenuates kidney fibrosis
Jackie Trink, Ifeanyi Kennedy Nmecha, Katrine Pilely, Renzhong Li, Zi Yang, Sydney Kwiecien, Melissa MacDonald, Bo Gao, Mariam A. Mamai, Chao Lu, Urooj F. Bajwa, Nikhil Uppal, James C. Fredenburgh, Masao Kakoki, Salvatore V. Pizzo, Anthony F. Rullo, Matthew B. Lanktree, Jeffrey I. Weitz, Yaseelan Palarasah, Joan C. Krepinsky
Jackie Trink, Ifeanyi Kennedy Nmecha, Katrine Pilely, Renzhong Li, Zi Yang, Sydney Kwiecien, Melissa MacDonald, Bo Gao, Mariam A. Mamai, Chao Lu, Urooj F. Bajwa, Nikhil Uppal, James C. Fredenburgh, Masao Kakoki, Salvatore V. Pizzo, Anthony F. Rullo, Matthew B. Lanktree, Jeffrey I. Weitz, Yaseelan Palarasah, Joan C. Krepinsky
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Research Article Nephrology Therapeutics

Inhibition of cell surface GRP78 and activated α2M interaction attenuates kidney fibrosis

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Abstract

We recently showed that cell surface translocation of the endoplasmic reticulum–resident protein GRP78, when bound by activated α 2-macroglobulin (α2M*), induces pro-fibrotic responses in glomerular mesangial cells in response to high glucose and regulates activation of the pro-fibrotic cytokine transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), implicating a pathogenic role in glomerulosclerosis. Interstitial fibrosis, largely mediated by proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTEC) and renal fibroblasts, develops later in kidney disease and correlates with functional decline. Here we investigated whether interstitial fibrosis was mediated by cell surface GRP78 (csGRP78)/α2M*. High glucose and TGF-β1 increased csGRP78 and α2M* in PTEC and renal fibroblasts, and their inhibition prevented fibrotic protein production. Interestingly, for TGF-β1, this depended on inhibition of noncanonical signaling through YAP/TAZ, with Smad3 activation unaffected. In vivo, type 1 diabetic Akita mice overexpressing TGF-β1 were treated with either a neutralizing antibody for csGRP78 (C38) or α2M* (Fα2M) or an inhibitory peptide blocking csGRP78/α2M* interaction, and mice with unilateral ureteral obstruction were treated with Fα2M or inhibitory peptide. Consistently, inhibition by antibody or peptide attenuated fibrosis and pro-fibrotic signaling. These findings show an important role for csGRP78/α2M* in mediating tubulointerstitial fibrosis in both diabetic and nondiabetic kidney disease and support their inhibition as a potential antifibrotic therapeutic intervention.

Authors

Jackie Trink, Ifeanyi Kennedy Nmecha, Katrine Pilely, Renzhong Li, Zi Yang, Sydney Kwiecien, Melissa MacDonald, Bo Gao, Mariam A. Mamai, Chao Lu, Urooj F. Bajwa, Nikhil Uppal, James C. Fredenburgh, Masao Kakoki, Salvatore V. Pizzo, Anthony F. Rullo, Matthew B. Lanktree, Jeffrey I. Weitz, Yaseelan Palarasah, Joan C. Krepinsky

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Figure 10

Treatment with a peptide inhibitor of csGRP78/α2M* interaction reduces fibrosis in the UUO model.

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Treatment with a peptide inhibitor of csGRP78/α2M* interaction reduces f...
(A) Schematic outline of the study. Created in BioRender. Trink, J. (2025) https://BioRender.com/8b94uo6 Treatment was initiated 3 days after UUO. (B) Active, but not scrambled, peptide dose-dependently inhibited fibrosis as measured by staining for PSR and fibronectin, as well as α-SMA, a marker for myofibroblast activation. (C) Pro-fibrotic signaling through FAK and Akt activation downstream of csGRP78/α2M*, assessed by their phosphorylation (Y397 and S473/475, respectively), was decreased by peptide. Akt phosphorylation showed dose dependency. (D) Smad3 activation (phospho-S473/475) and increased YAP were both reduced by active, but not scrambled, peptide (n = 3–5; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001; #P < 0.05 indicates significant only by t test; scale bar represents 20 μm).

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