Aldosterone is produced by the mammalian adrenal cortex to modulate blood pressure and fluid balance, however excessive, prolonged aldosterone production promotes fibrosis and kidney failure. How aldosterone triggers disease may involve actions that are independent of its canonical mineralocorticoid receptor. Here we present a Drosophila model of renal pathology caused by excess extra-cellular matrix formation, stimulated by exogenous aldosterone and insect ecdysone steroids. Chronic administration of aldosterone or ecdysone induces expression and accumulation of collagen-like pericardin at adult nephrocytes -podocyte-like cells that filter circulating hemolymph. Excess pericardin deposition disrupts nephrocyte (glomerular) filtration and causes proteinuria in Drosophila, hallmarks of mammalian kidney failure. Steroid-induced pericardin arises from cardiomyocytes associated with nephrocytes, reflecting an analogous role of mammalian myofibroblasts in fibrotic disease. Remarkably, the canonical ecdysteroid nuclear hormone receptor, ecdysone receptor EcR, is not required for aldosterone or ecdysone to stimulate pericardin production or associated renal pathology.Instead, these hormones require a cardiomyocyte-associated G-protein coupled receptor, dopamine-EcR (dopEcR), a membrane-associated receptor previously characterized in the fly brain as affecting behavior. This Drosophila renal disease model reveals a novel signaling pathway through which steroids may potentially modulate human fibrosis through proposed orthologs of dopEcR.
Significance Statement (120)Aldosterone regulates salt and fluid homeostasis, yet excess aldosterone contributes to renal fibrosis. Aldosterone acts through a nuclear hormone receptor, but an elusive, G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) is thought to also mediate the hormone's pathology. Here we introduce a Drosophila model of renal fibrosis. Flies treated with human aldosterone produce excess extra-cellular matrix and that causes kidney pathology. Flies treated with the insect steroid ecdysone produce similar pathology, and from this analogous response we identify an alternative receptor through which steroids mediate renal fibrosis --the GPCR dopamine-Ecdysone Receptor (dopEcR). dopEcR functions in heart muscle cells associated with nephrocytes, analogous to the role of myofibroblasts in human fibrosis. This finding opens avenues to identify mammalian GPCR homologs of dopEcR through which aldosterone mediates renal fibrosis. which receptor aside from MR might aldosterone stimulate G-coupled signaling and how does this modulate fibrosis?Here we address these issues with a new model of steroid-induced fibrosis based on Drosophila melanogaster. Genetic data reveal the GPRC dopamine-EcR (dopEcR) is necessary and sufficient for aldosterone and insect ecdysone to induce excess extra cellular matrix at nephrocytes and to disrupt fly renal function. Based on our findings we propose that mammalian homologs of dopEcR may offer a novel entrée to moderate fibrotic pathology in humans.
ResultsThe tub...