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Citations to this article

Kidney dendritic cell activation is required for progression of renal disease in a mouse model of glomerular injury
Felix Heymann, … , Hermann-Josef Gröne, Christian Kurts
Felix Heymann, … , Hermann-Josef Gröne, Christian Kurts
Published April 20, 2009
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2009;119(5):1286-1297. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI38399.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 9

Kidney dendritic cell activation is required for progression of renal disease in a mouse model of glomerular injury

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Abstract

The progression of kidney disease to renal failure correlates with infiltration of mononuclear immune cells into the tubulointerstitium. These infiltrates contain macrophages, DCs, and T cells, but the role of each cell type in disease progression is unclear. To investigate the underlying immune mechanisms, we generated transgenic mice that selectively expressed the model antigens ovalbumin and hen egg lysozyme in glomerular podocytes (NOH mice). Coinjection of ovalbumin-specific transgenic CD8+ CTLs and CD4+ Th cells into NOH mice resulted in periglomerular mononuclear infiltrates and inflammation of parietal epithelial cells, similar to lesions frequently observed in human chronic glomerulonephritis. Repetitive T cell injections aggravated infiltration and caused progression to structural and functional kidney damage after 4 weeks. Mechanistic analysis revealed that DCs in renal lymph nodes constitutively cross-presented ovalbumin and activated CTLs. These CTLs released further ovalbumin for CTL activation in the lymph nodes and for simultaneous presentation to Th cells by distinct DC subsets residing in the kidney tubulointerstitium. Crosstalk between tubulointerstitial DCs and Th cells resulted in intrarenal cytokine and chemokine production and in recruitment of more CTLs, monocyte-derived DCs, and macrophages. The importance of DCs was established by the fact that DC depletion rapidly resolved established kidney immunopathology. These findings demonstrate that glomerular antigen–specific CTLs and Th cells can jointly induce renal immunopathology and identify kidney DCs as a mechanistic link between glomerular injury and the progression of kidney disease.

Authors

Felix Heymann, Catherine Meyer-Schwesinger, Emma E. Hamilton-Williams, Linda Hammerich, Ulf Panzer, Sylvia Kaden, Susan E. Quaggin, Jürgen Floege, Hermann-Josef Gröne, Christian Kurts

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Total citations by year

Year: 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 Total
Citations: 2 3 1 6 5 5 4 4 4 2 10 9 10 12 11 9 7 104
Citation information
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Citations to this article in year 2009 (7)

Title and authors Publication Year
New roles revealed for T cells and DCs in glomerulonephritis
Alfred H.J. Kim1, Mary A. Markiewicz2, and Andrey S. Shaw2,3
Journal of Clinical Investigation 2009
Renal Dendritic Cells Ameliorate Nephrotoxic Acute Kidney Injury
RK Tadagavadi, WB Reeves
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 2009
T cells and dendritic cells in glomerular disease: the new glomerulotubular feedback loop
SS Sung, WK Bolton
Kidney International 2009
Possible renoprotection by vitamin D in chronic renal disease: beyond mineral metabolism
CR Doorenbos, J van den Born, G Navis, MH de Borst
Nature Reviews Nephrology 2009
T cell cross-talk with kidney dendritic cells in glomerulonephritis
U Panzer, C Kurts
Journal of Molecular Medicine 2009
Pathogenesis of kidney disease in systemic lupus erythematosus
H Bagavant, SM Fu
Current Opinion in Rheumatology 2009
CCR7 Deficiency Exacerbates Injury in Acute Nephritis Due to Aberrant Localization of Regulatory T Cells
K Eller, T Weber, M Pruenster, AM Wolf, G Mayer, AR Rosenkranz, A Rot
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 2009

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