Literature DB >> 28720684

FSGS as an Adaptive Response to Growth-Induced Podocyte Stress.

Ryuzoh Nishizono1,2, Masao Kikuchi1,2, Su Q Wang1, Mahboob Chowdhury1, Viji Nair1, John Hartman1, Akihiro Fukuda1,2, Larysa Wickman3, Jeffrey B Hodgin4, Markus Bitzer1, Abhijit Naik1, Jocelyn Wiggins1, Matthias Kretzler1, Roger C Wiggins5.   

Abstract

Glomerular sclerotic lesions develop when the glomerular filtration surface area exceeds the availability of podocyte foot process coverage, but the mechanisms involved are incompletely characterized. We evaluated potential mechanisms using a transgenic (podocin promoter-AA-4E-BP1) rat in which podocyte capacity for hypertrophy in response to growth factor/nutrient signaling is impaired. FSGS lesions resembling human FSGS developed spontaneously by 7 months of age, and could be induced earlier by accelerating kidney hypertrophy by nephrectomy. Early segmental glomerular lesions occurred in the absence of a detectable reduction in average podocyte number per glomerulus and resulted from the loss of podocytes in individual glomerular capillary loops. Parietal epithelial cell division, accumulation on Bowman's capsule, and tuft invasion occurred at these sites. Three different interventions that prevented kidney growth and glomerular enlargement (calorie intake reduction, inhibition of mammalian target of rapamycin complex, and inhibition of angiotensin-converting enzyme) protected against FSGS lesion development, even when initiated late in the process. Ki67 nuclear staining and unbiased transcriptomic analysis identified increased glomerular (but not podocyte) cell cycling as necessary for FSGS lesion development. The rat FSGS-associated transcriptomic signature correlated with human glomerular transcriptomes associated with disease progression, compatible with similar processes occurring in man. We conclude that FSGS lesion development resulted from glomerular growth that exceeded the capacity of podocytes to adapt and adequately cover some parts of the filtration surface. Modest modulation of the growth side of this equation significantly ameliorated FSGS progression, suggesting that glomerular growth is an underappreciated therapeutic target for preservation of renal function.
Copyright © 2017 by the American Society of Nephrology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  glomerular disease; growth; hypertrophic stress; podocyte; progression of renal failure

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28720684      PMCID: PMC5619973          DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2017020174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol        ISSN: 1046-6673            Impact factor:   10.121


  38 in total

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Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  2011-09-21       Impact factor: 10.612

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4.  Podocyte Growing Pains in Adaptive FSGS.

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5.  mTOR-mediated podocyte hypertrophy regulates glomerular integrity in mice and humans.

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