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Article Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) strongly upregulates the transcription factor Foxm1 in the proximal tubule in vivo, and Foxm1 drives epithelial proliferation in vitro. Here, we report that deletion of Foxm1 either with a nephron-specific Cre driver or by inducible global deletion reduced proximal tubule proliferation after ischemic injury in vivo. Foxm1 deletion led to increased AKI to chronic kidney disease transition, with enhanced fibrosis and ongoing tubule injury 6 weeks after injury. We report ERK mediated FOXM1 induction downstream of the EGFR in primary proximal tubule cells. We defined FOXM1 genomic binding sites by cleavage under targets and release using nuclease (CUT&RUN) and compared the genes located near FOXM1 binding sites with genes downregulated in primary proximal tubule cells after FOXM1 knockdown. The aligned data sets revealed the cell cycle regulator cyclin F (CCNF) as a putative FOXM1 target. We identified 2 cis regulatory elements that bound FOXM1 and regulated CCNF expression, demonstrating that Ccnf is strongly induced after kidney injury and that Foxm1 deletion abrogates Ccnf expression in vivo and in vitro. Knockdown of CCNF also reduced proximal tubule proliferation in vitro. These studies identify an ERK/FOXM1/CCNF signaling pathway that regulates injury-induced proximal tubule cell proliferation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11383596PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.175416DOI Listing

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