| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Regular Articles |


From the First Department of Medicine,*
Hamamatsu
University School of Medicine, Hamamatsu; and the School of
Nursing,
University of Shizuoka,
Shizuoka, Japan
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-smooth muscle actin. Some tubules in the deep cortex and the outer
stripe of the outer medulla had a mosaic appearance. Tall,
intact proximal tubular cells with a brush border and positivity for
Phaseolus vulgaris erythroagglutinin, adjoined
typical atrophic tubule cells having no brush border and an
immunostaining pattern characteristic for atrophic tubules. The
transformed interstitial cells expressing
-smooth muscle actin were
located near atrophic but not intact tubular epithelial cells. Type IV
collagen accumulated between damaged tubular cells and transformed
interstitial cells. Heat shock protein 47 showed immunoreactivity in
damaged epithelial cells and in interstitial myofibroblasts. Staining
with an anti-endothelial antibody suggested damage to peritubular
capillaries near atrophic tubules. By disturbance of microcirculation
following microsphere injection, proximal tubular cells
expressed vimentin and platelet-derived growth factor; diffusion of the
latter presumably stimulated transformation of interstitial cells to
myofibroblasts. Injured tubular epithelial cells and interstitial
myofibroblasts both were responsible for interstitial
fibrosis.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Atrophy and the dilation of tubules, and interstitial fibrosis have been assessed together as tubulointerstitial changes and considered en bloc as evidence of end-stage kidney disease.9,11 However, which of these changes in the tubules and interstitium are responsible for the progression of chronic renal disease and also how the specific changes interrelate causally is not clear. Furthermore, the origin and fate of these atrophic and dilated tubules are uncertain. El Nahas has suggested that tubular atrophy results from functional overload or increased metabolism in hypertrophic (dilated) tubules, although this hypothesis is not supported by conclusive evidence.11 Other previous studies have stressed the importance of damaged tubules in promoting tubulointerstitial injury, since tubular cells in a damaged kidney can express or secrete various cytokines including growth factors12,13 and matrix proteins.14,15 In addition, a transdifferentiation of tubular epithelial cells into myofibroblasts16 and high proliferation index among atrophic tubular cells have been noted in end-stage human kidneys with interstitial fibrosis.17 Since pathological changes in tubules occur at the same time as interstitial fibrosis in most animal models of renal disease, causal relationships between tubular changes and interstitial fibrosis have been difficult to delineate.
Recently we established a nonimmunologic model of progressive renal failure induced by microembolism in rats. In this model, relatively undamaged tubules are mingled with damaged tubules beginning in initial stages of renal failure,18 thus resembling human chronic renal diseases. The characteristic histological feature of this model is development of atrophic tubules in advance of any notable glomerular lesions, massive proteinuria, or hypertension. The appearance of atrophic tubules also precedes development of dilated tubules. These findings suggest that atrophic tubules may somehow incite progression of renal disease.
In this study, we used the new model to investigate the origin of atrophic tubules and their involvement in accumulation of myofibroblasts and matrix protein deposition in immediately surrounding interstitial tissues. We identified "mosaic tubules" that included both normal tubular epithelial cells and damaged cells, presenting valuable clues to the origin and pathogenetic role of atrophic tubules.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Male Wistar rats 12 weeks of age weighing 270 to 300 g were obtained from SLC (Hamamatsu, Japan), and were allowed free access to standard laboratory chow and water. Microembolism was produced as described in a previous report.18 In brief, the right kidney was removed using sodium pentobarbital (40 mg/kg, i.p.) for anesthesia. Microspheres (acryl beads 20 to 30 µm in diameter, approximately 5 x 105 per rat, kindly provided by Dr. Takabayashi, Hamamatsu College, University of Shizuoka, Japan) were suspended in 0.5 ml of normal saline and injected slowly into the aorta through a 27-gauge needle placed immediately caudal to the ostium of the left renal artery. During microsphere injection, the aorta caudal to the site of needle insertion as well as the anterior mesenteric and celiac arteries were clamped to direct the microspheres into the left renal artery. Blood flow through the left renal artery was maintained throughout this procedure. In control rats, normal saline instead of the microsphere suspension was injected following right nephrectomy.
Light Microscopic Examination
Five rats each were killed in saline- and microsphere-injected groups before and 4, 8, and 12 weeks after injection. The left kidneys were removed after perfusion with 10 ml of cold saline and then fixed in methyl Carnoys solution. Paraffin-embedded sections 2 µm thick were stained using periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) or Massons trichrome method.
Histochemical and Immunohistochemical Examinations
For histochemical and immunohistochemical examinations, 4-µm
sections were prepared and stained by an avidin-biotin-horseradish
peroxidase method (Histofine SAB-PO kit; Nitirei, Tokyo, Japan). To
determine the origin of atrophic tubules, the following antibodies or
markers were used: biotin-labeled lectin from Phaseolus
vulgaris erythroagglutinin (PHA-E; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) for the
proximal tubule17
; sheep polyclonal antibody against human
Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein (THP; Chemicon International, Temecula, CA)
for the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle19
;
biotin-labeled peanut agglutinin (PNA; Biomeda, Foster City, CA) for
the distal tubule19
; and cytokeratin (DAKO, Glostrup,
Denmark) for connecting and collecting tubules.20
It is
well known that some antibodies to cytokeratin can stain all components
of tubules in human kidneys and their stainability for tubular segments
is quite different between antibodies. The antibody we used stained
only connecting and collecting tubules in rat kidney in a preliminary
study. To investigate the mechanism of tubular basement membrane
thickening and fibrosis of the surrounding interstitium, several
antigens were examined in tubular epithelial cells and interstitium
using antibodies as follows: mouse monoclonal antibodies against
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) (monoclonal antibody to PDGF-B
chain, PGF-007, a gift from Mochida Pharmaceutical, Tokyo, Japan);
human
-smooth muscle actin (
-SMA, DAKO); vimentin (from porcine
ocular lens, Sigma); rabbit polyclonal antibodies against PDGF receptor
ß (PDGF-R, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA); and type IV
collagen (LSL, Tokyo, Japan). The secondary antibodies were
biotin-labeled donkey sera against mouse, rabbit, or sheep IgG
(Chemicon International). Collagen-synthesizing cells were identified
by staining heat shock protein (HSP) 47 with a mouse monoclonal
antibody (Stressgen; Victoria, BC, Canada). This HSP is recognized as a
collagen-specific molecular chaperone that plays a pivotal role in the
biosynthesis, processing, and secretion of procollagen from endoplasmic
reticulum.21-23
The number and the integrity of
peritubular capillaries were assessed using an endothelial
cell-specific mouse monoclonal antibody to rat RECA-1 antigen (Serotec,
Sapporo, Japan).
Morphometric Study
To evaluate the interrelationship among antigen expression in
tubulointerstitial cells (PDGF, PDGF-R, and
-SMA) and histological
change (frequency of atrophic tubules and severity of fibrosis),
morphometric studies were performed in 15 rats (5 rats each at 4 weeks,
8 weeks, and 12 weeks after surgery). Numbers of atrophic tubules and
PDGF-positive tubules were counted in 10 fields at a magnification of
x100. Atrophic tubules were identified immunohistochemically using
anti-vimentin antibody, since most cells appearing atrophic or damaged
were seen to express vimentin in their cytoplasm. PDGF-R- or
-SMA-positive interstitial cells were counted in 10 fields at a
magnification of x200. The number of positive tubules or cells in each
field was summed for use in comparisons. The extent of interstitial
fibrosis was determined in Massons trichrome-stained sections by
point-counting method using an eyepiece with a 10 x 10
grid. Under a magnification of x100, green-stained areas
overlapping grid-crossing points in 20 fields were summed and expressed
as a percentage of the total area.
To assess the change of the peritubular capillary blood flow in the interstitial lesions, the number of capillaries and the size of their lumens in the normal and injured area were separately measured in sections stained by anti-RECA-1 antibody from 5 rats killed at 8 weeks. Rats killed 8 weeks after microsphere injection were selected because the injured areas were moderately scattered in the renal interstitium. An injured area was defined by existence of atrophic and mosaic tubules and interstitial fibrosis. The areas of the normal and injured area were measured by point-counting method. The numbers of peritubular capillaries were counted in 5 fields in each section under a magnification of x200 and expressed as the density per 1 µm.2 The luminal area of the peritubular capillaries was measured with an image analyzer (Macscope, Mitani corp., Maruoka-cho, Japan), tracing the internal surface of 50 peritubular capillaries each in the normal and injured area and the mean value was calculated for statistical analysis.
Statistical Analysis
Correlation coefficients were determined using linear regression analysis. Statistical analysis was performed using Students t-test. Differences were considered significant for P < 0.05.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Atrophic tubules with thickened basement membranes were scattered among
normal tubules, mainly in the deep cortex and in the outer stripe of
the outer medulla, and could be seen as early as 4 weeks after
microsphere injection (Figure 1, A and B)
; with increasing intervals, the number of atrophic tubules steadily
increased (4 weeks, 4.04 ± 2.26/10 fields; 8 weeks, 6.26 ±
3.92/10 fields; 12 weeks, 36.0 ± 5.45/10 fields). Many dilated
tubules without thickening of tubular basement membrane were evident at
8 weeks after injection (Figure 1C)
, after which numbers of dilated
tubules increased gradually. By 12 weeks after injection, markedly
dilated tubules were numerous and sometimes contained large casts.
Interstitial fibrosis was prominent.
|
-SMA (Figures 2E and 3B)
-SMA-positive cells in the
interstitium were slightly increased at 4 weeks following microsphere
injection, showing rapid increase in parallel with increasing
histological damage. A significant correlation was found between the
numbers of PDGF-positive tubules and
-SMA-positive cells (Figure 3C)
-SMA-positive cells (Figure 3, D and E)
-SMA-positive cells were found
(not shown).
|
|
-SMA or PDGF-R were
found near the mosaic tubules, but cells positive for both
-SMA and
PDGF-R were almost exclusively in the vicinity of vimentin- and
PDGF-positive tubular cells (Figure 4, F and G)
|
|
-SMA-positive interstitial cells (Figure 6, AC)
|
|
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Tubulointerstitial changes in chronic renal diseases include atrophic tubules, dilated tubules, cast formation, cellular infiltration, and interstitial fibrosis. In our microembolic model, tubule atrophy preceded dilation of tubules, cast formation, or interstitial fibrosis. Thus, the model also is appropriate for study of the mechanisms underlying development of atrophic tubules and relationships between tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis. In a standard model of chronic renal failure, 5/6 nephrectomized rats, individual components of tubulointerstitial lesions, such as atrophic tubules, dilated tubules, and interstitial fibrosis develop almost simultaneously, interfering with evaluation of the effects and interrelationships of the components (unpublished observations).
The present study aimed to elucidate the pathogenesis of atrophy in tubules and of surrounding matrix protein accumulation in the early stage of our microembolization model. First, the origin of atrophic tubules was determined by immunostaining for several multiple site-specific tubular antigens (PHA-E reactive molecules for proximal tubules, THP for thick ascending limbs, PNA reactive T-antigen for distal tubules, and cytokeratin for connecting and collecting tubules). None of these proteins were expressed in atrophic tubules, though loss of previously existing immunoreactivity may have occurred in the course of atrophy. In this context, our finding of mosaic tubules is instructive: cells with brush borders were positive for PHA-E, identifying them proximal tubule epithelial cells while other, typically atrophic cells lacked a brush border and immunoreactivity for PHA-E, rested on a lamellated, thickened basement membrane and were immunoreactive for vimentin and PDGF. The mosaic tubules indicated that the atrophic tubules originally were proximal tubules.
Atrophic tubules were found as early as 4 weeks after microsphere injection. Development of atrophic tubules preceded such glomerular alterations as hyalinosis, necrosis, and tuft adhesion, which are thought to be induced by hyperfiltration. In addition, atrophic tubules were observed before development of severe proteinuria, hypertension, or hypercholesterolemia.18 These findings suggested that the atrophic changes in tubules resulted directly from microembolism rather than secondary effects via hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, or glomerular injury.
Using an immunohistochemical marker for capillaries, we found that near
atrophic and mosaic tubules the size of capillaries were significantly
decreased. The partially atrophic mosaic tubules were observed mainly
in the deep cortex and probably in the outer stripe of the outer
medulla, regions known to be particularly vulnerable to ischemic
stress.24,25
These findings suggested that the changes in
atrophic tubules and mosaic tubules were caused by disturbed
microcirculation, though we cannot exclude a possibility that the
decreased capillary area near atrophic tubules was caused by the lack
of reabsorptive function of atrophic tubules. In this regard, several
investigations about the relationship between atrophic tubules and
disturbance of microcirculation have been reported so
far.26-29
Møller et al reported that, as the chronic
renal disease progressed, the distance between tubules and adjacent
peritubular capillaries increased and the fraction of tubular
circumference facing capillaries decreased.26
Similar
explanation for an adverse effect of interstitial fibrosis on renal
function was described by Morrissey and Klahr27
in the
review on NF-
B regulation of renal fibrosis. Ohashi et
al28
demonstrated a significant decline in the number of
the peritubular capillaries, followed by tubulointerstitial scarring in
a rat experimental glomerulonephritis. In addition, Thomas et
al29
suggested a possibility that the tubulointerstitial
injury in aging rats is the consequence of ischemia secondary to
peritubular capillary injury and altered eNOS expression.
In experimentally induced anemia, Kaissling et al30 showed that the proximal tubules display structural changes which seem to be correlated to hypoxia and a volume of the peritubular space was increased. These effects were evident only in the cortical labyrinth. Their findings are instructive to analyze the results in this study. However, the hypoxic stress in anemic condition and in the current model might not be the same. For example, anemia is usually associated with the increase in blood flow. In contrast the renal blood flow is probably decreased in the current model. In addition, anemia might induce other physiological adaptations, systemic and local, in the host. Another difference is that their experiment was a short term one, only for 8 days, in comparison to the present long-term, 12-week, experiment. These differences might be the cause of the differences in the cites showing pathological changes.
We also found small but significant increase in proteinuria developing 4 weeks after microsphere injection.18 This suggested that hyperfiltration of remained glomeruli had already started. Although we think that it is unlikely that hyperfiltration alone induced the histological tubulointerstitial change, we cannot exclude an effect of hyperfiltration on the appearance of atrophic tubules. Hypoxic stress on tubular cells might be determined by the balance of oxygen demand and supply, not only absolute value of blood flow. It is likely that nephrons with hyperfiltration would be more susceptible to suffer from hypoxia. To distinguish exactly the contributions of hypoxia and hyperfiltration, further studies should be done.
The pale epithelial cytoplasm of atrophic tubules strongly expressed vimentin, which is not expressed by normal tubular epithelial cells but is known to be expressed by degenerating and regenerating tubular cells.31-33 In this model, sloughing and regeneration of proximal tubular cells, such as observed in acute renal failure, did not occur. Therefore, we assumed that vimentin-positive tubular epithelial cells were damaged ones. However, as we reported in the previous paper, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was expressed in some cells of atrophic tubules.18 This suggested that some of cells of atrophic tubules might be regenerating cells. In this regard, Hall and colleagues34,35 reported that PCNA is involved in unscheduled DNA synthesis, i.e., nucleotide excision-repair process, and the expression of PCNA is a necessary but not sufficient requirement for proliferation; accordingly the PCNA-positive, vimentin-positive atrophic tubular cells also might be damaged ones.
PDGF was co-expressed with vimentin in these atrophic proximal tubular epithelial cells. The distal tubule constitutively expressed PDGF, although staining was weak36 and did not show enhancement by embolization in this model even in advanced stages. Renal expression of PDGF has been localized to platelets, monocytes/macrophages, glomerular mesangial and epithelial cells, epithelial cells of inner medullary collecting ducts, and renal fibroblasts.37 Kliem et al36 reported that in 5/6 nephrectomized rats, PDGF-B chain expression was increased in distal tubules and collecting ducts, and was also weakly positive in some proximal tubules, particularly in areas of tubulointerstitial injury. Prominent proximal tubular expression of PDGF, which we found in our model, has not been reported in the past. The cause of these differences is not known, but may reflect differences in stimulation for PDGF expression or difficulty in identifying proximal tubules with degenerative changes in previous studies. In our microembolic model, stimulation for PDGF expression on proximal tubules such as hypoxic stress may be more intense than in other models.38-41
To investigate the presumed target for PDGF produced in injured tubules, we examined the expression of PDGF-R, which showed strong staining in interstitial cells, most likely fibroblasts,37,42 around the atrophic tubules. In control animals and in the intact interstitium of diseased rats, a small number of PDGF-R-positive interstitial cells were found in patchy fibrous areas, especially around vessels. However, the epithelial cells in atrophic tubules did not express PDGF-R. These results agree with Kliem et al,36 who reported that atrophic tubules with flattened epithelium were surrounded by strongly PDGF-R-positive interstitial cells in 5/6 nephrectomized rats.
PDGF has been reported to have chemotactic and mitogenic effects on
renal interstitial fibroblasts and to transform these cells into
myofibroblasts.36,37,43
Tang et al43
demonstrated that administration of the PDGF-BB dimer at a dose of 5
mg/kg induced tubulointerstitial cell proliferation and fibrosis. In
that study, expression of
-SMA indicated that transformation to
myofibroblast began on day 3 and peaked at day 5 and declined markedly
by day 21. These authors concluded that PDGF-BB might be an important
mediator of tubulointerstitial hyperplasia and fibrosis. In the current
study
-SMA expression closely correlated with PDGF-R expression, and
about one-third of PDGF-R-positive cells also expressed
-SMA.
Numbers of cells immunostaining for
-SMA increased in parallel with
interstitial fibrosis. Surrounding the atrophic tubules, matrix protein
staining green by Massons trichrome method accumulated
circumferentially, and excluded capillaries from this peritubular zone.
In mosaic tubules, myofibroblasts and peritubular matrix protein
accumulation were spatially restricted to the area adjoining vimentin-
and PDGF-positive cells. Few myofibroblasts and little matrix protein
were found in contact with normal proximal tubular cells that possessed
a brush border. On the basis of these findings, we assumed that PDGF
released from damaged proximal tubules activated interstitial
fibroblasts via PDGF-R present on the fibroblasts, and transform them
to myofibroblasts. These interactions between damaged proximal tubules
and myofibroblasts stimulated production of abundant collagen fibers to
result in interstitial fibrosis. The precise role of PDGF in this
model, however, has not been fully determined, and its elucidation will
require further studies.
Fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, proximal tubular cells, and macrophages all have been proposed as a candidate for extracellular matrix protein-synthesizing cells in renal interstitial fibrosis.44-48 When we examined expression of HSP 47, which is known to increase in parallel with collagen production,21-23 interstitial myofibroblasts and damaged proximal tubular cells both were positive, which suggested that both interstitial cells and tubular cells may synthesize abundant collagen fibers that form a fibrotic zone between atrophic tubules and myofibroblasts. However, because HSP 47 is an indirect evidence for collagen synthesis, we have to confirm collagen synthesis in those cells by other direct means such as in situ hybridization before bringing an final conclusion.
In conclusion, we propose the following pathogenetic scheme concerning
atrophic tubules and surrounding fibrosis in our model (Figure 9)
. Following multiple microembolism, a
disturbance in the interstitial microcirculation causes functional
damage in a portion of the epithelial cells of proximal tubules,
resulting in atrophic tubules. The atrophic cells, which express
vimentin, PDGF, and HSP 47, secrete PDGF into the interstitial space,
which promotes myofibroblastic transformation of interstitial
fibroblasts through PDGF-R. The myofibroblasts synthesize collagen
fibers, which are deposited in a zone between these cells and atrophic
tubular cells. In addition, atrophic tubular cells may themselves
produce collagen fibers, thus playing a dual role as a stimulator and
an effector of fibrosis. Deposition of matrix protein, in turn, causes
a disturbance in the adjacent microcirculation that injures neighboring
epithelial cells. Once established, this sequence acts as a vicious
circle of progressive tubulointerstitial injury.
|
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication September 22, 2000.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
B regulation of renal fibrosis during ureteral obstruction. Semin Nephrol 1998, 18:603-611[Medline]
1 (III) collagen expression in experimental tubulointerstitial nephritis. Kidney Int 1997, 51:926-931[Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. Kimura, M. Asano, K. Abe, M. Miyazaki, T. Suzuki, and A. Hishida Role of atrophic changes in proximal tubular cells in the peritubular deposition of type IV collagen in a rat renal ablation model Nephrol. Dial. Transplant., August 1, 2005; 20(8): 1559 - 1565. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. T. Yu Progression of Chronic Renal Failure Arch Intern Med, June 23, 2003; 163(12): 1417 - 1429. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |