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Title: TNF-alpha enhances colony-stimulating factor-1-induced macrophage accumulation in autoimmune renal disease. Author: Moore KJ, Yeh K, Naito T, Kelley VR. Journal: J Immunol; 1996 Jul 01; 157(1):427-32. PubMed ID: 8683148. Abstract: The lpr mutation on the MRL background accelerates autoimmune nephritis in which macrophage (M phi) accumulation is prominent. Renal disease is absent in other strains with lpr. TNF-alpha and CSF-1 are increased in the kidney of MRL-lpr mice with loss of renal function. We have established that CSF-1 can incite renal injury in mice with the lpr mutation, and M phi from the MRL strain hyper-respond to this growth factor. We hypothesized that TNF-alpha enhanced the M phi response to CSF-1 in MRL-lpr mice. We now report that TNF-alpha enhanced CSF-1-induced bone marrow M phi proliferation in MRL-lpr mice, and not in congenic MRL +/+, normal C3H +/+, and BALB/c, or another strain with lpr (C3H-lpr). Using a gene transfer approach to deliver CSF-1 together with TNF-alpha into the kidney, we evaluated the impact on renal injury. Tubular epithelial cells genetically modified to produce CSF-1 (CSF-1-TEC) and TNF-alpha (TNF-TEC) placed under the renal capsule caused a greater accumulation of M phi in the implant site than CSF-1-TECs alone in MRL-lpr, but not MRL +/+ mice. We noted in tissues adjacent but not distal to the implanted TECs, an increase in M phi in the interstitium and surrounding glomeruli of MRL-lpr but not MRL +/+ mice. This indicated that CSF-1 and TNF-alpha released by TECs were responsible for promoting renal pathology. Taken together, these data suggest that the simultaneous expression of TNF-alpha and CSF-1 in the MRL-lpr kidney fosters M phi accumulation. We speculate that the increase in M phi in the kidney in response to CSF-1 and TNF-alpha is responsible for the rapid tempo of autoimmune renal injury in MRL-lpr mice.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]