1. Academic Validation
  2. Neutrophil extracellular traps license macrophage production of chemokines to facilitate CD8+ T cell infiltration in obstruction-induced renal fibrosis

Neutrophil extracellular traps license macrophage production of chemokines to facilitate CD8+ T cell infiltration in obstruction-induced renal fibrosis

  • Protein Cell. 2025 Feb 25:pwaf020. doi: 10.1093/procel/pwaf020.
Hongshuai Jia 1 2 Guang Yue 1 2 Pin Li 1 3 Renjun Peng 4 Ruyue Jin 1 3 Yuhan Chen 3 Hualin Cao 5 Kangning Yang 6 Xiaowei Zhang 1 Xiaoyu Yi 1 Yangyang Wu 1 2 Xiangling Deng 1 Xiaoye Chen 5 Lifei Ma 1 Yang Zhao 1 Xiaoguang Zhou 1 Tian Tao 1 Xiaoli Shen 1 Xu Zhang 7 Yuandong Tao 1 3 Huixia Zhou 1 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Pediatric Urology, The Seventh Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100010, China.
  • 2 Medical School of Chinese PLA, Beijing 100010, China.
  • 3 National Engineering Laboratory for Birth Defects Prevention and Control of Key Technology, Beijing 100010, China.
  • 4 The PLA Rocket Force Characteristic Medical Center, Beijing 100010, China.
  • 5 Nanxi Shan Hospital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, The Second People's Hospital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Guilin 541002, China.
  • 6 Sichuan Mianyang 404 Hospital, Mianyang 621000, China.
  • 7 Department of Urology, The Third Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100010, China.
Abstract

Renal fibrosis is a common mechanism leading to kidney failure in chronic kidney diseases (CKDs), including obstructive nephropathy (ON). Dysregulated inflammation is central to the development of renal fibrosis, but how local immune cells within the tissue microenvironment integrate and coordinate to drive this condition remains largely unknown. Herein, we documented that neutrophils were abundantly recruited and expelled neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in human and mouse fibrotic kidneys. Importantly, circulating levels of NET components displayed a significant correlation with worsened kidney function in ON patients. In the unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) mouse model, blocking NETs by protein-arginine deiminase type 4 (PAD4) deletion or DNase treatment significantly impaired NET formation and inhibited renal fibrosis and inflammation, whereas NET adoptive transfer exacerbated the fibrotic process. Moreover, NET-mediated renal fibrosis was associated with enhanced infiltration of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, which produced granzyme B (GZMB) to drive tubular cell epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and fibroblast activation. Accordingly, pharmacological inhibition of GZMB resulted in blunted kidney inflammation and fibrosis. Furthermore, NETs profoundly potentiated the production of T-cell chemokines CXCL9/10/11 in macrophages, but not in tubular cells or fibroblasts, thus driving T-cell infiltration and fueling inflammatory cascades in the kidneys. Mechanistically, the NET-macrophage interaction was partially mediated by the TLR2/4 signaling. Thus, our work reveals a previously unexplored role of the collaboration between NETs and macrophages in supporting CD8+ T cell infiltration, which orchestrates kidney inflammation and fibrosis.

Keywords

CD8+ T cells; Obstructive nephropathy; granzyme B; macrophages; neutrophil extracellular traps; renal fibrosis.

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