TY - JOUR
T1 - Monocyte/Macrophage-Specific Loss of ARNTL Suppresses Chronic Kidney Disease-Associated Cardiac Impairment
AU - Yoshida, Yuya
AU - Nishikawa, Naoki
AU - Fukuoka, Kohei
AU - Tsuruta, Akito
AU - Otsuki, Kaita
AU - Fukuda, Taiki
AU - Terada, Yuma
AU - Tanihara, Tomohito
AU - Kumamoto, Taisei
AU - Tsukamoto, Ryotaro
AU - Nishi, Takumi
AU - Oyama, Kosuke
AU - Hamamura, Kengo
AU - Mayanagi, Kouta
AU - Koyanagi, Satoru
AU - Ohdo, Shigehiro
AU - Matsunaga, Naoya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Defects in Aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like 1 (ARNTL), a central component of the circadian clock mechanism, may promote or inhibit the induction of inflammation by monocytes/macrophages, with varying effects on different diseases. However, ARNTL’s role in monocytes/macrophages under chronic kidney disease (CKD), which presents with systemic inflammation, is unclear. Here, we report that the expression of Arntl in monocytes promoted CKD-induced cardiac damage. The expression of G-protein-coupled receptor 68 (GPR68), which exacerbates CKD-induced cardiac disease, was regulated by ARNTL. Under CKD conditions, GPR68 expression was elevated via ARNTL, particularly in the presence of PU.1, a transcription factor specific to monocytes and macrophages. In CKD mouse models lacking monocyte-specific ARNTL, GPR68 expression in monocytes was reduced, leading to decreased cardiac damage and fibrosis despite no improvement in renal excretory capacity or renal fibrosis and increased angiotensin II production. The loss of ARNTL did not affect the expression of marker molecules, indicating the origin or differentiation of cardiac macrophages, but affected GPR68 expression only in cardiac macrophages derived from mature monocytes, highlighting the significance of the interplay between GPR68 and ARNTL in monocytes/macrophages and its influence on cardiac pathology. Understanding this complex relationship between circadian clock mechanisms and disease could help uncover novel therapeutic strategies.
AB - Defects in Aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like 1 (ARNTL), a central component of the circadian clock mechanism, may promote or inhibit the induction of inflammation by monocytes/macrophages, with varying effects on different diseases. However, ARNTL’s role in monocytes/macrophages under chronic kidney disease (CKD), which presents with systemic inflammation, is unclear. Here, we report that the expression of Arntl in monocytes promoted CKD-induced cardiac damage. The expression of G-protein-coupled receptor 68 (GPR68), which exacerbates CKD-induced cardiac disease, was regulated by ARNTL. Under CKD conditions, GPR68 expression was elevated via ARNTL, particularly in the presence of PU.1, a transcription factor specific to monocytes and macrophages. In CKD mouse models lacking monocyte-specific ARNTL, GPR68 expression in monocytes was reduced, leading to decreased cardiac damage and fibrosis despite no improvement in renal excretory capacity or renal fibrosis and increased angiotensin II production. The loss of ARNTL did not affect the expression of marker molecules, indicating the origin or differentiation of cardiac macrophages, but affected GPR68 expression only in cardiac macrophages derived from mature monocytes, highlighting the significance of the interplay between GPR68 and ARNTL in monocytes/macrophages and its influence on cardiac pathology. Understanding this complex relationship between circadian clock mechanisms and disease could help uncover novel therapeutic strategies.
KW - ARNTL
KW - cardiac pathology GPR68
KW - chronic kidney disease
KW - circadian clock mechanism
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U2 - 10.3390/ijms252313009
DO - 10.3390/ijms252313009
M3 - Article
C2 - 39684718
AN - SCOPUS:85211928808
SN - 1661-6596
VL - 25
JO - International journal of molecular sciences
JF - International journal of molecular sciences
IS - 23
M1 - 13009
ER -