| Literature DB >> 29212948 |
Yeawon Kim1, Sun-Ji Park1, Scott R Manson2, Carlos Af Molina2,3, Kendrah Kidd4, Heather Thiessen-Philbrook5, Rebecca J Perry4, Helen Liapis6,7, Stanislav Kmoch4,8, Chirag R Parikh5,9, Anthony J Bleyer4, Ying Maggie Chen1.
Abstract
ER stress has emerged as a signaling platform underlying the pathogenesis of various kidney diseases. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop ER stress biomarkers in the incipient stages of ER stress-mediated kidney disease, when a kidney biopsy is not yet clinically indicated, for early therapeutic intervention. Cysteine-rich with EGF-like domains 2 (CRELD2) is a newly identified protein that is induced and secreted under ER stress. For the first time to our knowledge, we demonstrate that CRELD2 can serve as a sensitive urinary biomarker for detecting ER stress in podocytes or renal tubular cells in murine models of podocyte ER stress-induced nephrotic syndrome and tunicamycin- or ischemia-reperfusion-induced acute kidney injury (AKI), respectively. Most importantly, urinary CRELD2 elevation occurs in patients with autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease caused by UMOD mutations, a prototypical tubular ER stress disease. In addition, in pediatric patients undergoing cardiac surgery, detectable urine levels of CRELD2 within postoperative 6 hours strongly associate with severe AKI after surgery. In conclusion, our study has identified CRELD2 as a potentially novel urinary ER stress biomarker with potential utility in early diagnosis, risk stratification, treatment response monitoring, and directing of ER-targeted therapies in selected patient subgroups in the emerging era of precision nephrology.Entities:
Keywords: Cell stress; Nephrology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29212948 PMCID: PMC5752286 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.92896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708