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Published Online
on November 24, 2008

Hypertension. 2008
Published online before print November 24, 2008, doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.108.115675
A more recent version of this article appeared on January 1, 2009
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Right arrow Animal models of human disease

Submitted on April 30, 2008
Revised on May 21, 2008

Contribution of Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Vav2 to Hyperhomocysteinemic Glomerulosclerosis in Rats

Fan Yi; Min Xia; Ningjun Li; Chun Zhang; Lin Tang; and Pin-Lan Li*

From the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: pli{at}mail1.vcu.edu.

Abstract—We currently reported that Vav2, a member of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor-Vav subfamily, participates in homocysteine-induced increases in Rac1 activity and consequent activation of NADPH oxidase in rat mesangial cells. However, the physiological relevance of this cellular action of Vav2 remains unknown. The present study tested a hypothesis that Vav2 importantly mediates the injurious action of homocysteine on glomeruli and thereby contributes to the development of glomerulosclerosis during hyperhomocysteinemia. We found that, among Vav members, Vav2 was abundantly expressed in glomeruli. When Vav2 short hairpin RNA was transfected into the kidneys of Sprague-Dawley rats, hyperhomocysteinemia induced by folate-free diet failed to significantly enhance Rac1 activity and increase NADPH-dependent superoxide production. In these rats with silenced renal Vav2 gene, glomerular injury during hyperhomocysteinemia was markedly attenuated compared with those rats only receiving mock vector transfection, as shown by ameliorated albuminuria and extracellular matrix metabolism. In the rat kidneys with transfection of a dominant-active Vav2 variant (onco-Vav2), we found that overexpression of Vav2 led to significant increases in Rac1 activity, superoxide production, and glomerular injury, which was similar to that induced by hyperhomocysteinemia. However, this Vav2 overexpression was unable to further enhance homocysteine-induced glomerular injury. We concluded that Vav2-mediated activation of NADPH oxidase is an important initiating mechanism resulting in hyperhomocysteinemic glomerular injury through enhanced local oxidative stress.


Key words: end-stage renal disease • homocystinemia • redox signaling • kidney glomerulus