Outer membrane vesicles derived from gut microbiota mediate tubulointerstitial inflammation: a potential new mechanism for diabetic kidney disease

来自肠道微生物群的外膜囊泡介导肾小管间质炎症:糖尿病肾病的潜在新机制

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作者:Pei Pei Chen, Jia Xiu Zhang, Xue Qi Li, Liang Li, Qin Yi Wu, Liang Liu, Gui Hua Wang, Xiong Zhong Ruan, Kun Ling Ma

Conclusions

Increased OMVs due to dysbiosis translocated through leaky gut barrier into distant tubulointerstitium and induced cellular inflammation and renal tubulointerstitial injury in DKD. These findings enrich the mechanism understanding of how gut microbiota and its releasing OMVs influence the development and progression of kidney disease.

Methods

Gut microbiota in diabetes mellitus rats was manipulated by microbiota depletion and fecal microbiota transplantation to explore its role in tubulointerstitial inflammation. To check the direct effects of OMVs, fecal bacterial extracellular vesicles (fBEVs) were administrated to mice orally and HK-2 cells in vitro. For mechanistic investigations, HK-2 cells were treated with small interfering RNA against caspase-4 and fBEVs pre-neutralized by polymyxin B.

Results

By performing gut microbiota manipulation, it was confirmed that gut microbiota mediated tubulointerstitial inflammation in DKD. In diabetic rats, gut microbiota-derived OMVs were increased and were clearly detected in distant renal tubulointerstitium. Diabetic fBEVs directly administered by gavage translocated into tubular epithelial cells and induced tubulointerstitial inflammation and kidney injury. In vitro, OMVs were internalized through various endocytic pathways and triggered cellular inflammatory response. Mechanistically, it was revealed that OMVs-derived lipopolysaccharide induced tubular inflammation, which was mediated by the activation of the caspase-11 pathway. Conclusions: Increased OMVs due to dysbiosis translocated through leaky gut barrier into distant tubulointerstitium and induced cellular inflammation and renal tubulointerstitial injury in DKD. These findings enrich the mechanism understanding of how gut microbiota and its releasing OMVs influence the development and progression of kidney disease.

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