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Increased FGF23 protects against detrimental cardio-renal consequences during elevated blood phosphate in CKD
Erica L. Clinkenbeard, Megan L. Noonan, Joseph C. Thomas, Pu Ni, Julia M. Hum, Mohammad Aref, Elizabeth A. Swallow, Sharon M. Moe, Matthew R. Allen, Kenneth E. White
Erica L. Clinkenbeard, Megan L. Noonan, Joseph C. Thomas, Pu Ni, Julia M. Hum, Mohammad Aref, Elizabeth A. Swallow, Sharon M. Moe, Matthew R. Allen, Kenneth E. White
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Research Article Endocrinology Genetics

Increased FGF23 protects against detrimental cardio-renal consequences during elevated blood phosphate in CKD

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Abstract

The phosphaturic hormone FGF23 is elevated in chronic kidney disease (CKD). The risk of premature death is substantially higher in the CKD patient population, with cardiovascular disease (CVD) as the leading mortality cause at all stages of CKD. Elevated FGF23 in CKD has been associated with increased odds for all-cause mortality; however, whether FGF23 is associated with positive adaptation in CKD is unknown. To test the role of FGF23 in CKD phenotypes, a late osteoblast/osteocyte conditional flox-Fgf23 mouse (Fgf23fl/fl/Dmp1-Cre+/–) was placed on an adenine-containing diet to induce CKD. Serum analysis showed casein-fed Cre+ mice had significantly higher serum phosphate and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) versus casein diet and Cre– genotype controls. Adenine significantly induced serum intact FGF23 in the Cre– mice over casein-fed mice, whereas Cre+ mice on adenine had 90% reduction in serum intact FGF23 and C-terminal FGF23 as well as bone Fgf23 mRNA. Parathyroid hormone was significantly elevated in mice fed adenine diet regardless of genotype, which significantly enhanced midshaft cortical porosity. Echocardiographs of the adenine-fed Cre+ hearts revealed profound aortic calcification and cardiac hypertrophy versus diet and genotype controls. Thus, these studies demonstrate that increased bone FGF23, although associated with poor outcomes in CKD, is necessary to protect against the cardio-renal consequences of elevated tissue phosphate.

Authors

Erica L. Clinkenbeard, Megan L. Noonan, Joseph C. Thomas, Pu Ni, Julia M. Hum, Mohammad Aref, Elizabeth A. Swallow, Sharon M. Moe, Matthew R. Allen, Kenneth E. White

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Figure 1

Biochemical and molecular phenotypes of flox-Fgf23 mice during CKD.

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Biochemical and molecular phenotypes of flox-Fgf23 mice during CKD.
(A) ...
(A) Flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre mice were placed on casein control or 0.2% adenine diet for 8 weeks. By 4 weeks on diet, serum intact FGF23 levels were significantly elevated in the mice fed adenine diet, yet the levels in flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre+ mice were significantly lower than those in the flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre– mice, which continued at the 8-week time point. (B) Bone Fgf23 mRNA levels rose in the flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre– mice fed adenine at 4 weeks on diet versus casein control. At 8 weeks on diet, the flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre+ adenine-fed mice had significantly lower Fgf23 mRNA compared with flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre–. (C) Serum phosphate levels were found to be similar between flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre– and flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre+ mice at 4 weeks on casein, with an increase in the flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre+ mice at 8 weeks. On adenine diet, the Cre+ mice had a significant increase versus flox-Fgf23/Dmp1-Cre– littermates on the adenine diet at both time points. (D) Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels were measured to monitor renal function. As expected, adenine diet increased these levels, but were further elevated in the Cre+ mice on adenine at the 8-week time point. (E) Serum analysis also showed that the adenine diet model induced hyperparathyroidism. All mice receiving adenine had a significant increase in serum PTH compared with the casein control group, even at the 4-week time point. There was no difference between genotypes and there was no further increase at the 8-week time point in the adenine-fed mice (n = 4–6 per group). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 versus casein diet within the same genotype; ‡P < 0.05 versus Cre– on the same diet.

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