2 research outputs found
Expression of the transcriptional regulator Egr-1 in experimental glomerulonephritis: Requirement for mesangial cell proliferation
Expression of the transcriptional regulator Egr-1 in experimental glomerulonephritis: Requirement for mesangial cell proliferation. The early growth response gene-1 (Egr-1), a zinc finger transcriptional regulator, was induced in a rat model of mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis (GN). Northern blot analysis revealed a maximal 14.9-fold increase in glomerular Egr-1 mRNA at day 6 of GN. By immunohistochemistry Egr-1 protein expression was demonstrated to be mainly confined to glomerular mesangial cells (MC). To test whether Egr-1 directly regulates MC proliferation, cultured MCs were stimulated with platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) after preincubation with different Egr-1 antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs). PDGF-induced Egr-1 mRNA levels were inhibited by up to 75% and protein levels by up to 91%. In addition Egr-1-specific ASOs blocked PDGF-induced rise in 3H-thymidine uptake by 83% and almost completely abrogated increase in MC number. We conclude that Egr-1 induction is of critical importance for PDGF-induced mitogenic signaling in MCs, and inhibition of Egr-1 in vivo may offer an approach to oppose glomerular MC proliferation in glomerular inflammatory disease