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Ten IU School of Medicine researchers out of a team of eleven scientists, are responsible for the findings of a new study they conducted to investigate alternative ways to treat kidney infections. 

IU School of Medicine researchers discover promising new way to prevent, treat kidney infections

INDIANAPOLIS – Ten IU School of Medicine researchers out of a team of eleven scientists, are responsible for the findings of a new study they conducted to investigate alternative ways to treat kidney infections. Their work, which is published in the high-quality research journal Nature Communications, examined how to utilize the kidneys’ own internal infection fighting capabilities to treat and even prevent kidney infections, with the knowledge that eventually antibiotics won’t work. 

According to statistics, urinary tract infections or UTIs are one of the most frequent bacteria-causing infections affecting people of all ages. UTIs become more severe kidney infections, when the bacteria ascend from the bladder to the kidney. Kidney infections are common, occurring in 13 out of 10,000 females and 4 of 10,000 males every year. Kidney infections may cause high fevers, permanent kidney damage or even sepsis. Additional data suggests that cases of antibiotic resistant UTIs are surging, making the way for more UTIs to become the more serious kidney infections.

Specifically, the research team discovered that a type of cells within the kidney called “intercalated cells” both consume bacteria and secrete acid, which is a process – known as phagocytosis – and has historically been a capability only associated with white blood cells.

“If you were to increase white blood cell activity to treat an infection, you would affect a person’s whole body. However, since we found these cells work the same way but are only present in the kidney, the long-term potential would be the ability to activate these cells to prevent or clear an infection from the kidney,” said Andrew Schwaderer, MD, professor of pediatrics at IU School of Medicine, and one of the study’s senior authors. “The idea is that with this approach we will eventually be able to replace or complement antibiotic therapy.”
 
Intercalated cells exist at the exit to the kidney and can act as its guardians; the first to encounter and consume the bacteria as they invade the kidney from the bladder and then secrete the acid to neutralize it.
 
The researchers initially predicted this pathway using single-cell RNA sequencing available through the IU School of Medicine’s Medical Genomics Core. Utilizing normal human kidney tissue, they were able to sequence each intercalated cell individually, allowing them to tell exactly what's going on in one cell type versus the other. When an advanced software analyzed the cells, phagocytosis capabilities of these cell was predicted as a leading function. 

 “It was also interesting that we started with human tissue as opposed to mouse models and then went back to the mouse, said Vijay Saxena, PhD and lead author of this study. “It's a very nonbiased way to study a cellular function and a very translational approach.” 

Utilizing IU School of Medicine’s O’Brien Imaging Center, one of only three available in the world, allowed researchers the ability to image mice in real time, delivering live results. This approach is preferable to a cell culture system which may or may not reflect what happens in the human body.

The research was supported in part by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases R01DK106286, Lilly Foundation (A.L.S. and D.S.H.), and the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) which is funded in part by award number UL1TR002529 from NIH. 

Media contact: Christine Drury, cldrury@iu.edu, 317-385-9227 (cell)

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About IU School of Medicine
IU School of Medicine is the largest medical school in the U.S. and is annually ranked among the top medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The school offers high-quality medical education, access to leading medical research and rich campus life in nine Indiana cities, including rural and urban locations consistently recognized for livability.