| Literature DB >> 27066465 |
Abstract
Nephrotic syndrome (NS) in children includes a diverse group of diseases that range from genetic diseases without any immunological defects to causes that are primarily due to immunological effects. Recent advances in molecular and genomic studies have resulted in a plethora of genetic defects that have been localized to the podocyte, the basic structure that is instrumental in normal filtration process. Although the disease can manifest from birth and into adulthood, the primary focus of this review would be to describe the novel genes and pathology of primary podocyte defects that cause NS in children. This review will restrict itself to the pathology of congenital NS, minimal change disease (MCD), and its variants and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). The two major types of congenital NS are Finnish type characterized by dilated sausage shaped tubules morphologically and diffuse mesangial sclerosis characterized by glomerulosclerosis. MCD has usually normal appearing biopsy features on light microscopy and needs electron microscopy for diagnosis, whereas FSGS in contrast has classic segmental sclerosing lesions identified in different portions of the glomeruli and tubular atrophy. This review summarizes the pathological characteristics of these conditions and also delves into the various genetic defects that have been described as the cause of these primary podocytopathies. Other secondary causes of NS in children, such as membranoproliferative and membranous glomerulonephritis, will not be covered in this review.Entities:
Keywords: C1q nephropathy; Finnish type; congenital nephrotic syndrome; diffuse mesangial sclerosis; focal segmental glomerulosclerosis; minimal change disease
Year: 2016 PMID: 27066465 PMCID: PMC4814732 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2016.00032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Causes of nephrotic syndrome in children.
| Congenital nephrotic syndrome of Finnish type |
| Diffuse mesangial sclerosis (DMS) |
| Isolated DMS |
| Part of Denys–Drash syndrome |
| Epidermolysis bullosa associated |
| Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome |
| Familial focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) |
| Congenital infections including syphilis, toxoplasmosis, and HIV |
| Cytomegalovirus |
| HIV-associated nephropathy |
| Minimal change nephropathy |
| Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis |
| Diffuse mesangial hypercellularity |
| Membranous glomerulonephritis |
| Membranoproliferative GN (MPGN) (NS may predominate or with nephritic syndrome) |
| Lupus nephropathy |
| IgA nephropathy |
| Drugs |
| Malignancies |
| Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) |
Genetic causes of nephrotic syndrome.
| Genes | Location (if known) | Protein | Significant clinical association |
|---|---|---|---|
| NPHS1 | 19q13.12 | Nephrin | CNS Finnish type |
| NPHS2 | 1q25.2 | Podocin | Steroid-resistant NS; rapidly progressive renal disease; FSGS |
| WT1 (NPHS4) | 11p13 | Wilms’ tumor 1 | Denys–Drash syndrome; nephrotic syndrome–FSGS; Frasier syndrome |
| SMARCAL1 | 2q35 | SW1/SNF related | Schimke immunoosseous dysplasia |
| PLCE1 (NPHS3) | 10q23.33 | Phospholipase CE1 | DMS, FSGS |
| PTPRO | 12p12.3 | Protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor-type O | Steroid-resistant NS |
| LAMB2 | 3p21.31 | Laminin, beta-2 | CNS with ocular abnormalities; Pierson syndrome |
| INF2 (FSGS 5) | 14q32.33 | Inverted formin 2 | FSGS |
| COQ6 | 14q24.3 | Coenzyme Q10 def, primary 6 | Progressive NS in infancy with sensorineural deafness; FSGS, DMS |
| MYO1E (FSGS6) | 15q21 | Myosin 1E | FSGS (AR) |
| TRPC6 (FSGS2) | 11q22.1 | Transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily C, member 6 | FSGS (AD) |
| COQ2 | 4q21.23 | Coenzyme Q10 deficiency-1 | Steroid-resistant NS |
| LMX1B | 9q33.3 | LIM homeobox transcription factor 1, beta | Nail–patella syndrome |
| ADCK4 (NPHS9) | 19q13.2 | AARF domain-containing kinase 4 | NS (AR) |
| PDSS2 | 6q21 | Prenyl diphosphate synthese, subunit 2 | NS |
| ACTN4 (FSGS1) | 19q13.2 | Alpha-actinin-4 | FSGS |
| CD2AP (FSGS3) | 6p12.3 | CD2-associated protein | FSGS |
| MYH9 | 22q13.1 | Non-muscle myosin IIA heavy chain | FSGS, collapsing glomerulopathy |
Figure 1A diagrammatic representation of the basement membrane foot processes with the location of the most common genes implicated in nephrotic syndrome.
Figure 2Histological panel for congenital nephrotic syndrome of Finnish type. (A) A photomicrograph showing a cluster of normal appearing glomeruli with dilated proximal tubules with proteinaceous contents (H&E 100×). (B) Another area from this resected renal specimen showing the varying shapes of the dilated proximal tubules, a characteristic feature of congenital NS (H&E 100×). (C) Another image from the opposite kidney showing the same morphological features with no segmental sclerosis evident at this time (H&E 100×).
Figure 3Histological images for diffuse mesangial sclerosis. (A) An image from another nephrectomy specimen showing the numerous dilated tubules with small occasional glomeruli (H&E 40×). (B) Higher magnification of the glomeruli showing a solidified appearance on light microscopy (H&E 200×). (C) A Jones silver stain highlighting the solidified loops with accentuation of the epithelial cells on the surface. No capillary loops are identified (Jones methanamine silver 200×). (D) A trichrome stain showing the mesangial sclerosis characteristic of this disease. Note again the prominent epithelial cells. Progressive disease leads to glomerular obsolescence and interstitial fibrosis seen in this image (Trichrome 200×).
Figure 4Minimal change disease. (A) A photomicrograph showing normal appearing uniform sized glomeruli in the cortex (H&E 400×). (B) A silver stain showing the normal loops with accentuation of the epithelial cells (Jones 400×). (C) A low magnification image of a trichrome stain showing no glomerular or interstitial fibrosis (Trichrome 40×). (D) A negative immunofluorescence panel for immunoglobulins or C3 (Direct immunofluorescence 400×). (E,F) An electron micrograph image showing open capillary loops with effacement of foot processes better visualized in (F), which shows the diffuse fusion of foot processes [6200× (E) and 46,000× (F)].
Common forms of familial FSGS.
| Gene (protein effected) | Inheritance | Typical age of onset | Distinguishing clinical features |
|---|---|---|---|
| NPHS1 (nephrin) | AR | Infancy | Congenital nephrotic syndrome (Finnish type); severe nephrosis leading to ESRD |
| NPHS2 (podocin) | AR | 3 months to 5 years | 10–20% of SRNS in children |
| WT1 (Wilms tumor 1) | AD | Child | Diffuse mesangial sclerosis/FSGS ± Wilms tumor or urogenital lesions |
| PLCε1 (phospholipase Cε1) | AR | 4 months to 12 years | Diffuse mesangial sclerosis/FSGS |
| CD2AP (CD2-associated protein) | AR | <6 years | Rre, progresses to ESRD |
| INF2 (inverted formin 2) | AD | Teen/young adult | Mild nephrotic syndrome, but progressive CKD |
| ACTN4 (α-actinin 4) | AD | Any age | Mild nephrotic syndrome may develop progressive CKD |
| TRPC6 | AD | Adult (age 20–35 years) | Nephrotic, progressive CKD |
| tRNALeu(UUR) gene | Mitochondrial DNA | Adult | May be associated deafness, diabetes, muscle problems, retinopathy (maternal inheritance) |
Figure 5Primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. (A,B) Photomicrographs showing two glomeruli with a segmental lesion characterized by obliteration of capillary loops with solidification and eosinophilia of the segment due to sclerosis (H&E 200×). (C,D) PAS stained sections showing a focal sclerosing lesion in a segment in (C) and in the perihilar region in (D) close to the vascular pole. Note again the preservation of capillary loops in other segments of the glomeruli (PAS 200×). (E) A trichrome stain showing the perihilar zone of sclerosis as evidenced by the blue staining of that segment. Note also some fibrin deposition in that area (red) (Trichrome 200×). (F) Immunofluorescence showing strong staining for albumin in the tubules, a characteristic feature of nephrotic syndrome in general. Not shown is the associated IgG deposition (DIF 100×). (G,H) Two electron photomicrographs showing collapsed loops in the (H) with effacement of foot processes in both images. Typically, the foot process effacement may be segmental and over the sclerosed segments (EM 3400×).
Figure 6Secondary FSGS. (A) An image showing a biopsy with interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, and a segmentally sclerosed glomerulus (H&E 100×). (B) PAS stain showing the extensive tubular atrophy (PAS 100×). (C) PAS stain showing two glomeruli, one larger than the other with the smaller one showing an area of sclerosis associated with epithelial cell proliferation in that area (PAS 200×). (D) A silver stain showing the segmental sclerosis in the perihilar region (Jones 200×). (E,F) Electron micrographs showing two images of the basement membranes with variable diameters showing prominent splitting of lamina densa with a basket weave appearance characteristic of hereditary nephritis, proven by collagen studies. Note also the microvillous transformation of foot processes and effacement in this patient with nephrotic range proteinuria (11,500×).
Figure 7Collapsing glomerulopathy. (A,B) H&E images showing a low power and higher magnification appearance of a glomerulus with prominent epithelial cells and closed capillary loops better visualized on special stains (H&E 100× and 200×). (C) A PAS stain showing the collapsed cords of basement membranes with exuberant epithelial cell proliferation that seems to “choke” the capillary loops (PAS 400×). (D) A silver stain showing another glomerulus with wrinkling of the basement membranes and prominent epithelial cell proliferation (Jones 400×).
Figure 8C1q nephropathy. (A,B) Light microscopy showing a low and high magnification images of normal appearing glomeruli in this child with nephrotic syndrome. Note one glomerulus in (B) is undergoing normal obsolescence (H&E 100× and 200×). (C) A silver stain showing normal glomeruli with no tubular atrophy (Jones 100×). (D) Immunofluorescence for C1q shows a 2+ staining in a mesangial location within a glomerulus. All other stains were negative, including C3, IgG, and IgM (DIF 100×). (E,F) Electron micrographs showing open capillary loops with mesangial, paramesangial, and even some subendothelial deposits. Note diffuse foot process effacement (3400× and 7100×).
Pathological features of podocytopathies in children.
| Diagnosis | Light microscopy glomeruli | LM tubulointerstitial changes | Immunofluorescence | Electron microscopy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNS Finnish type | Normal immature glomeruli early; later mesangial increase; sclerosis over time | Early cystic changes in tubules, prominent over time. No casts, epithelium attenuated | Initial none; later IgM and C3 | Foot process effacement. No deposits. Non-specific |
| DMS | Increased mesangial matrix diffuse; segmental sclerosis possible; podocyte hyperplasia | Tubular ectasia, small cysts, casts, progress to atrophy and interstitial fibrosis | IgM and C3 in mesangium | Extensive foot process effacement; increased mesangial matrix, no deposits. BM thickened and lamellated |
| Minimal change Disease (MCD) | Normal appearance of glomeruli, some podocyte prominence | Normal | Negative | Diffuse effacement of foot processes; partial if treated |
| FSGS cellular | Segmental hypercellularity – endothelial cells, foam cells, and inflammatory cells, podocyte hyperplasia – pseudocrescents | Atrophy variable with blood in tubules; interstitial inflammation | C3, IgM | Foot process effacement restricted. Capillary lumina occluded |
| FSGS NOS | Segmental sclerosis, podocyte hyperplasia, random distribution of sclerotic segment; hyalinosis | Atrophy with interstitial inflammation and fibrosis variable | C3 and IgM | Foot process effacement in region of sclerosis. No deposits usually but small paramesangial |
| FSGS with mesangial hypercellularity | Segmental sclerosis, mesangial hypercellularity of non-sclerotic glomeruli | Tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis | IgM and C3 in sclerosis and diffusely in mesangium | Extensive podocyte effacement segmental. No deposits |
| Collapsing glomerulopathy | Diffuse basement membrane wrinkling with collapse of capillary BM with obliteration of lumina, diffuse podocyte hyperplasia | Extensive, atrophy, interstitial inflammation, edema, fibrosis, tubular regeneration | IgM, C3 | Wrinkling of BM, podocyte prominence, foot process effacement. Rare paramesangial deposits, tubuloreticular inclusions only in HIV |
| C1q nephropathy | Normal or FSGS | Normal or tubular atrophy. Variable interstitial changes | C1q at least 2+; IgG, IgM, C3 | Mesangial and paramesangial deposits; rare subendothelial, foot process effacement |