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Letian Yang

Sichuan University

Publishes on Acute Kidney Injury Research, Central Venous Catheters and Hemodialysis, Dialysis and Renal Disease Management. 45 papers and 841 citations.

45Publications
841Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

FFAR4 improves the senescence of tubular epithelial cells by AMPK/SirT3 signaling in acute kidney injury
Letian Yang, Bo Wang, Fan Guo et al.|Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy|2022
Cited by 108Open Access

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a serious clinical complication with high morbidity and mortality rates. Despite substantial progress in understanding the mechanism of AKI, no effective therapy is available for treatment or prevention. We previously found that G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family member free fatty acid receptor 4 (FFAR4) agonist TUG891 alleviated kidney dysfunction and tubular injury in AKI mice. However, the versatile role of FFAR4 in kidney has not been well characterized. In the study, the expression of FFAR4 was abnormally decreased in tubular epithelial cells (TECs) of cisplatin, cecal ligation/perforation and ischemia/reperfusion injury-induced AKI mice, respectively. Systemic and conditional TEC-specific knockout of FFAR4 aggravated renal function and pathological damage, whereas FFAR4 activation by TUG-891 alleviated the severity of disease in cisplatin-induced AKI mice. Notably, FFAR4, as a key determinant, was firstly explored to regulate cellular senescence both in injured kidneys of AKI mice and TECs, which was indicated by senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal) activity, marker protein p53, p21, Lamin B1, phospho-histone H2A.X, phospho-Rb expression, and secretory phenotype IL-6 level. Mechanistically, pharmacological activation and overexpression of FFAR4 reversed the decrease of aging-related SirT3 protein, where FFAR4 regulated SirT3 expression to exhibit anti-senescent effect via Gq subunit-mediated CaMKKβ/AMPK signaling in cisplatin-induced mice and TECs. These findings highlight the original role of tubular FFAR4 in cellular senescence via AMPK/SirT3 signaling and identify FFAR4 as a potential drug target against AKI.

Fatty acid-binding protein 4 is a therapeutic target for septic acute kidney injury by regulating inflammatory response and cell apoptosis
Bo Wang, Jun Xu, Qian Ren et al.|Cell Death and Disease|2022
Cited by 84Open Access

Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory state in response to infection, and concomitant acute kidney injury (AKI) significantly increases morbidity and mortality. Growing evidence suggests that fatty acid-binding protein 4 (FABP4) is critically involved in kidney diseases, while its role in septic AKI remains unknown. Here, FABP4 was mainly upregulated in renal tubular epithelial cells (RTECs) following cecal ligation and puncture (CLP)- or lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced septic AKI. FABP4 inhibition by genetic deletion or BMS309403 treatment both attenuated kidney dysfunction and pathological injury in CLP- or LPS-treated mice. Notably, RTEC-specific deletion of FABP4 also showed similar renoprotective effects. Moreover, FABP4 inhibition alleviated inflammation and apoptosis in CLP-injured kidneys and LPS-stimulated mouse tubular epithelial cells. Mechanistically, TLR4 blockage improved sepsis-induced kidney injury, as well as suppressed c-Jun phosphorylation and FABP4 expression, where c-Jun knockdown also inhibited LPS-stimulated FABP4 level. Meanwhile, FABP4 inhibition reduced the elevated phosphorylated c-Jun, while the levels of TLR4 and MyD88 were uninfluenced. Collectively, the increased FABP4 in RTECs is dependent on TLR4/c-Jun signaling activation and contributes to kidney injury, by forming a positive feedback loop with c-Jun to aggravate inflammation and apoptosis in septic AKI. Thus, FABP4 may be a therapeutic target for septic AKI.