T cells play an important role in the development of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). The mechanism underlying such T cell-based kidney disease, however, remains elusive. Here the authors report that activated CD8 T cells elicit renal inflammation and tissue injury via releasing miR-186-5p-enriched exosomes. Continuing the cohort study identifying the correlation of plasma level of miR-186-5p with proteinuria in FSGS patients, it is demonstrated that circulating miR-186-5p is mainly derived from activated CD8 T cell exosomes. Renal miR-186-5p, which is markedly increased in FSGS patients and mice with adriamycin-induced renal injury, is mainly delivered by CD8 T cell exosomes. Depleting miR-186-5p strongly attenuates adriamycin-induced mouse renal injury. Supporting the function of exosomal miR-186-5p as a key circulating pathogenic factor, intravenous injection of miR-186-5p or miR-186-5p-containing T cell exosomes results in mouse renal inflammation and tissue injury. Tracing the injected T cell exosomes shows their preferential distribution in mouse renal tubules, not glomerulus. Mechanistically, miR-186-5p directly activates renal tubular TLR7/8 signal and initiates tubular cell apoptosis. Mutating the TLR7-binding sequence on miR-186-5p or deleting mouse TLR7 largely abolishes renal tubular injuries induced by miR-186-5p or adriamycin. These findings reveal a causative role of exosomal miR-186-5p in T cell-mediated renal dysfunction.
Home>CD8 T Cell-Derived Exosomal miR-186-5p Elicits Renal Inflammation via Activating Tubular TLR7/8 Signal Axis
CD8 T Cell-Derived Exosomal miR-186-5p Elicits Renal Inflammation via Activating Tubular TLR7/8 Signal Axis
- Impact factors: 15.1
- Publication: Advanced Science
- Author:Xiaodong Xu,Shuang Qu,Changming Zhang,Mingchao Zhang,Weisong Qin,Guisheng Ren,Hao Bao,Limin Li,Ke Zen,Zhihong Liu
- DOI citation-doi:10.1002/advs.202301492
- Date:2023-07-03