| Literature DB >> 26701979 |
Marianne Delville1, Emilie Baye2, Antoine Durrbach3, Vincent Audard4, Tomek Kofman4, Laura Braun5, Jérôme Olagne6, Clément Nguyen2, Georges Deschênes7, Bruno Moulin5, Michel Delahousse8, Gwenaëlle Kesler-Roussey9, Séverine Beaudreuil3, Frank Martinez10, Marion Rabant11, Philippe Grimbert4, Morgan Gallazzini12, Fabiola Terzi12, Christophe Legendre13, Guillaume Canaud14.
Abstract
FSGS is a common glomerular disorder that has a high propensity for recurrence after kidney transplant. The pathophysiology of FSGS is unknown, but podocytes seem to be the target of one or several circulating factors that lead to cytoskeleton reorganization and proteinuria. Research on podocytes has identified B7-1 as an important factor in podocyte biology and a new therapeutic target in renal disease. Indeed, in four patients with recurrent FSGS after transplant, treatment with the B7-1 blocker abatacept was associated with proteinuria remission. Here, we prospectively treated nine patients with recurrent FSGS after transplant using either abatacept or belatacept, a B7-1 blocker with higher affinity, and did not induce proteinuria remission. Furthermore, we did not detect B7-1 expression by immunofluorescence in podocytes of biopsy specimens from these or other kidney grafts or podocytes of native kidney biopsy specimens. In conclusion, B7-1 blockade did not induce FSGS remission after transplant in our study.Entities:
Keywords: focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; podocyte; signaling; transplantation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26701979 PMCID: PMC4978058 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2015091002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol ISSN: 1046-6673 Impact factor: 10.121