Acute Renal Failure in Endotoxemia Is Caused by TNF Acting Directly on TNF Receptor-1 in Kidney

Patrick N. Cunningham(University of Chicago), Hristem M. Dyanov(University of Chicago), Pierce Park(University of Chicago), Jun Wang(University of Chicago), Kenneth A. Newell(University of Chicago), Richard J. Quigg(University of Chicago)
The Journal of Immunology
June 1, 2002
Cited by 360Open Access
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Abstract

Bacterial endotoxin (LPS) is responsible for much of the widespread inflammatory response seen in sepsis, a condition often accompanied by acute renal failure (ARF). In this work we report that mice deficient in TNFR1 (TNFR1(-/-)) were resistant to LPS-induced renal failure. Compared with TNFR1(+/+) controls, TNFR1(-/-) mice had less apoptosis in renal cells and fewer neutrophils infiltrating the kidney following LPS administration, supporting these as mediators of ARF. TNFR1(+/+) kidneys transplanted into TNFR1(-/-) mice sustained severe ARF after LPS injection, which was not the case with TNFR1(-/-) kidneys transplanted into TNFR1(+/+) mice. Therefore, TNF is a key mediator of LPS-induced ARF, acting through its receptor TNFR1 in the kidney.


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