| Literature DB >> 29270398 |
Martin Helmstädter1,2, Tobias B Huber3, Tobias Hermle1,2.
Abstract
Glomerular disorders are a major cause of end-stage renal disease and effective therapies are often lacking. Nephrocytes are considered to be part of the Drosophila excretory system and form slit diaphragms across cellular membrane invaginations. Nehphrocytes have been shown to share functional, morphological, and molecular features with podocytes, which form the glomerular filter in vertebrates. Here, we report the progress and the evolving tool-set of this model system. Combining a functional, accessible slit diaphragm with the power of the genetic tool-kit in Drosophila, the nephrocyte has the potential to greatly advance our understanding of the glomerular filtration barrier in health and disease.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; endocytosis; garland cell; glomerular disease; nephrocyte; podocyte; renal disease
Year: 2017 PMID: 29270398 PMCID: PMC5725439 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Localization of nephrocytes and functional comparison with mammals. (A) The schematic shows the anatomical position of nephrocytes (green) within the larval body (left) and the adult fly (right). Garland cell nephrocytes localize within a ring around the esophagus and pericardial nephrocytes are found in pairs along the heart tube. (B) The schematic compares the glomerular function of mammals (left) and Drosophila (right). The mammalian glomerular filter is three-layered, consisting of the fenestrated endothelium, basement membrane, and the podocytes that form foot processes. Between these, the slit diaphragm is localized. Filtration occurs from the blood through the filter into the urinary space. In Drosophila, nephrocytes function as individual cells that are clustered. The glomerular filter is bi-layered, lacking the endothelium. Filtration occurs from the larval blood, the hemolymph, being destined for processing in endosomes.
Figure 2Study of nephrocyte ultrastructural morphology using electron microscopy. The schematic illustrates a surface detail of a nephrocyte. Shown are labyrinthine channels as membrane invaginations that are sealed by the slit diaphragm. (A) The analogy to podocyte ultrastructure is most obvious in sections that are perpendicular to the nephrocyte surface. The slit diaphragm is recognizable as a fine line next to the electron-density around the entry to the membrane invagination. (B) Tangential sections through the surface show the slit diaphragm as continuous lines. This fine linear pattern correlates with the findings by confocal microscopy and staining of the ortholog of nephrin, sns (inset). (C) Perpendicular sections through the nephrocyte surface may be confusing when they cut through the nearly parallel lines of the slit diaphragms at an oblique angle. This results in an image that makes it difficult to identify the slit diaphragms and labyrinthine channels. Stretches of electron-density below the surface are mere indicators of their presence. SD indicates slit diaphragm, LC indicates labyrinthine channels, scale bars represent 500 nm.