Mengqing Ma, Hao Zhang, Weijuan Deng, Xia Du, Mengxing Chen, Dawei Chen, Binbin Pan, Zhaowei Wang, Ting Chen, Caimei Chen, Xin Wan, Changchun Cao
Mengqing Ma, Hao Zhang, Weijuan Deng, Xia Du, Mengxing Chen, Dawei Chen, Binbin Pan, Zhaowei Wang, Ting Chen, Caimei Chen, Xin Wan, Changchun Cao
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common and fatal complication of severe pneumonia, yet the mechanisms linking pulmonary inflammation to remote kidney injury remain poorly understood. Multicenter cohort data (n = 300) revealed that the incidence of severe pneumonia–associated AKI (SP-AKI) was 53.6%, with a mortality rate of 24.2%. SP-AKI was associated with elevated circulating levels of HMGB1, NETs, and IL-33. Murine experiments demonstrated that alveolar HMGB1 triggers the formation of IL-33–enriched NETs, which migrate to the kidney and activate tubular ST2/NF-κB signaling, driving inflammation and apoptosis. Genetic knockout of IL-33, ST2, or the NET-forming key enzyme PAD4, as well as pharmacological inhibition of HMGB1, IL-33, or NETs, all attenuated lung and kidney injury. Exogenous HMGB1 amplified NET-mediated IL-33 release, establishing a self-sustaining HMGB1/NET/IL-33 feed-forward loop. PAD4 deficiency completely blocked NET generation and disrupted HMGB1/IL-33 signaling. This study identified and validated a damage-associated molecular pattern–driven (DAMP-driven) HMGB1/NET/IL-33 signaling axis that mediates remote kidney injury in SP-AKI, redefining NETs from local effectors to cross-organ pathogenic carriers, thereby providing potential DAMP-targeted therapeutic avenues for SP-AKI.
Authors
Mengqing Ma, Hao Zhang, Weijuan Deng, Xia Du, Mengxing Chen, Dawei Chen, Binbin Pan, Zhaowei Wang, Ting Chen, Caimei Chen, Xin Wan, Changchun Cao
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