Pexicrine effects of basement membrane components on paracrine signaling by renal tubular cells

Pexicrine effects of basement membrane components on paracrine signaling by renal tubular cells. Paracrine interactions between tubular epithelium and interstitial cells have been assumed to be mediated largely by soluble cytokines. While the role of extracellular matrix (ECM) and matrix metalloprot...

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Veröffentlicht in:Kidney international 1996-01, Vol.49 (1), p.48-58
Hauptverfasser: Lewis, Mark P., Fine, Leon G., Norman, Jill T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pexicrine effects of basement membrane components on paracrine signaling by renal tubular cells. Paracrine interactions between tubular epithelium and interstitial cells have been assumed to be mediated largely by soluble cytokines. While the role of extracellular matrix (ECM) and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in modifying cell function is widely appreciated, the role of the renal tubular basement membrane in modulation of tubulointerstitial function has not been studied. To establish whether those components of the ECM which support tubular epithelial cells also influence cell function (that is, a pexicrine effect), we studied their effects on paracrine signaling between epithelium and fibroblasts. Primary cultures of rat renal proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTE) were cultured on laminin (LN), collagen types -IV and -I (COL-IV, COL-I) and fibronectin (FN). PTE attained confluence more rapidly when grown on LN = COL-IV > COL-I = FN = plastic. On all substrates PTE produced the MMPs, gelatinase-A and -B and collagenase with an apparent increase in gelatinase-A and -B production when cultured on LN. MMPs were found to be secreted both apically and basally with basal secretion predominating, except on LN where secretion was primarily from the apical surface. Cultures of rat renal cortical interstitial fibroblasts were established and characterized. Cortical fibroblasts (CF) were found to secrete gelatinase-A and collagenase. Conditioned medium (CM) from PTE cultured on COL-IV stimulated proliferation of CF but proliferation was unaltered by CM from PTE grown on other substrates. By contrast, co-culture of PTE on LN with CF suppressed collagenase and gelatinase activity in both cell types, indicating a bi-directional, paracrine modulation of MMP production. Thus in the tubulointerstitium, the BM components LN and COL-IV not only fulfill a structural role but act as signaling molecules with differential effects which modify the function of the tubular epithelium and its paracrine interaction with adjacent fibroblasts. The initiation of interstitial fibrosis induced by injury to the tubular basement membrane may reside in the perturbation of this interaction.
ISSN:0085-2538
1523-1755
DOI:10.1038/ki.1996.7