| Literature DB >> 24327929 |
Miroslav Sekulic1, Simona Pichler Sekulic.
Abstract
It is well known that glomerular podocyte injury and loss are present in numerous nephropathies and that the pathophysiologic consecution of disease hinges upon the fate of the podocyte. While multiple factors play a hand in glomerulopathy progression, basic logic lends that if one monitors the podocyte's status, that may reflect the status of disease. Recent investigations have focused on what one can elucidate from the noninvasive collection of urine, and have proven that certain, specific biomarkers of podocytes can be readily identified via varying techniques. This paper has brought together all described urinary biomarkers of podocyte injury and is made to provide a concise summary of their utility and testing in laboratory and clinical theatres. While promising in the potential that they hold as tools for clinicians and investigators, the described biomarkers require further comprehensive vetting in the form of larger clinical trials and studies that would give their value true weight. These urinary biomarkers are put forth as novel indicators of glomerular disease presence, disease progression, and therapeutic efficacy that in some cases may be more advantageous than the established parameters/measures currently used in practice.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24327929 PMCID: PMC3845336 DOI: 10.1155/2013/782395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patholog Res Int ISSN: 2042-003X
Figure 1The protein biomarkers discussed in the paper are highlighted in this figure to show their cellular localization and the protein-protein associations that occur in glomerular podocyte foot processes. The podocyte is situated upon the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and is anchored to it in part by alpha 3 integrins (Intα3). The slit diaphragm is illustrated with nephrin from adjacent foot processes interacting and forming a “zipper-like” structure. One can appreciate how the actin cytoskeleton (composed of F-actin) brings together the apical, lateral, and basal surfaces of the foot process: membrane proteins (podocalyxin, nephrin, alpha 3 integrin, etc.) via adaptor proteins (CD2AP, α-actinin 4, etc.) interact with actin, and as such they can modulate it. Wilms tumor protein 1 (WT1) has been identified as a transcription factor and is also localized within exosomes. Mindin has been localized within glomeruli, specifically to podocytes, and in cell culture found to be secreted into culture medium. Further details of each protein can be found in their respective sections within the paper.
Figure 2A simplified glomerulus and initial segment of the nephron are depicted; mesangia and the interweaved, capillary tuft structure are not shown to focus upon a single capillary and its related glomerular filtration apparatus. Also not depicted is the continuity between the visceral and parietal epithelial layers of the glomerulus. A glomerular capillary is lined by the fenestrated endothelia, which is intimately associated with the glomerular basement membrane (GBM). Also associated with the GBM is the visceral epithelial layer consisting of podocytes; the podocyte is made up of a cell body and processes that allow it to wrap finger-like projects about glomerular capillaries. Interposed between podocyte foot processes is a space spanned by the slit diaphragm—a key structure in the limitation of particles (based on size) from passing into the ultrafiltrate. Material/fluid that passes through the endothelia, GBM, and podocyte/slit diaphragm (these three constitute the glomerular filtration apparatus) makes it into Bowman's space, and the fluid at this point is termed ultrafiltrate. The ultrafiltrate from here passes through the length of the nephron—with modification possible—and urinary tract. The podocytes that lay on the left side of the shown capillary (1) are shown in a normal, healthy state: foot processes exist with developed slit diaphragms in between. In contrast, the right side of the capillary exhibits podocytes of an injured phenotype (2) effacement is present (other manifestations of an injured podocyte are not depicted, but can be read about in the paper), and at times podocytes may shed material later to be found in urine. If the podocyte is injured to a certain degree, it may detach from the underlying GBM and be observed in collected urine. A GBM denuded of podocytes may develop and lend itself as a surface for adherence with the parietal epithelium.
Figure 3Podocytes envelop the capillary tuft of the glomerular body and are an integral part of the glomerular filtration apparatus. If podocytes are injured or lost via any number of mechanisms, podocyte specific material or whole podocytes themselves may traverse the length of the nephron and urinary tract to be collected/observed in the excreted urine product. With such material in hand, a number of noted techniques can be used to identify the podocyte derivations. More poignantly, investigations to date have described that such techniques can identify podocyte specific proteins, mRNA, an exosomal transcription factor, and podocalyxin positive granular structures.
Urinary biomarkers of podocytopathy in patients: increased urinary levels correlate with the presence or the advancement of glomerular disease (except when otherwise noted*).
| Protein | mRNA | Exosomal transcription factor | PPGS | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Podocalyxin | IgAN [ | Podocalyxin | DN [ | WT1 | FSGS [ | AcGN [ |
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| Nephrin | DN [ | Nephrin | DN [ | |||
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| Podocin | PE [ | Podocin | PE [ | |||
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| CR1 | AuGN [ |
| DN [ | |||
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| CD80 | Relapsed MCD [ |
| FSGS [ | |||
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| Mindin | DN [ | Synaptopodin | DN [ | |||
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| CD59 | MG [ |
| DN [ | |||
Numbers in parentheses refer to citations that can be noted in the References section of this paper.
Abbreviations: messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA), complement receptor 1 (CR1), Wilms tumor protein 1 (WT1), CD-2-associated protein (CD2AP), podocalyxin positive granular structures (PPGS), urinary podocalyxin (u-podocalyxin), urinary CR1 (u-CR1), urinary podocin mRNA (u-podocin mRNA), urinary synaptopodin mRNA (u-synaptopodin mRNA), IgA nephropathy (IgAN), Henoch-Schönlein purpura nephritis (HSPN), diabetic nephropathy (DN), focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), acute kidney injury (AKI), preeclampsia (PE), lupus nephritis (LN), minimal change disease (MCD), membranous nephropathy (MN), nephrotic syndrome (NS), acute glomerulonephritis (AuGN), active glomerulonephritis (AcGN), membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN), Alport syndrome (AS), and poststreptococcal acute glomerulonephritis (PSAGN).
*This table summarizes that the majority of studies presented direct correlation of increased urinary levels of a biomarker with the incident or worsening of a specific glomerular disease; however, some studies (as noted with an asterisk and a short explanation) presented opposite findings and are thus highlighted.
a B7-1 encodes for CD80.
b ACTN4 encodes for α-actinin 4.