| Literature DB >> 29922234 |
Claire E Martin1, Nina Jones1.
Abstract
Podocytes are a major component of the glomerular blood filtration barrier, and alterations to the morphology of their unique actin-based foot processes (FP) are a common feature of kidney disease. Adjacent FP are connected by a specialized intercellular junction known as the slit diaphragm (SD), which serves as the ultimate barrier to regulate passage of macromolecules from the blood. While the link between SD dysfunction and reduced filtration selectivity has been recognized for nearly 50 years, our understanding of the underlying molecular circuitry began only 20 years ago, sparked by the identification of NPHS1, encoding the transmembrane protein nephrin. Nephrin not only functions as the core component of the extracellular SD filtration network but also as a signaling scaffold via interactions at its short intracellular region. Phospho-regulation of several conserved tyrosine residues in this region influences signal transduction pathways which control podocyte cell adhesion, shape, and survival, and emerging studies highlight roles for nephrin phospho-dynamics in mechanotransduction and endocytosis. The following review aims to summarize the last 5 years of advancement in our knowledge of how signaling centered at nephrin directs SD barrier formation and function. We further provide insight on promising frontiers in podocyte biology, which have implications for SD signaling in the healthy and diseased kidney.Entities:
Keywords: chronic kidney disease; nephrin; phosphorylation; podocyte; signal transduction
Year: 2018 PMID: 29922234 PMCID: PMC5996060 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Podocyte protein nephrin is a central component in formation and maintenance of the slit diaphragm (SD). (A) Kidney podocytes wrap finger-like projections around the capillaries of the glomerulus, and these culminate in a network of interacting foot processes (FP). FPs contribute to the glomerular filtration barrier, which is also made up of fenestrated endothelium and the intermediating glomerular basement membrane (GBM). The SD, a specialized podocyte–podocyte junction found between interdigitating FPs, largely determines the size-selectivity of the barrier. (B) A closer look reveals the SD is a molecular sieve made up of nephrin molecules. The repetitive nature and precise patterning of extracellular nephrin–nephrin regions form pores that allow for discerning filtration of the blood (yellow arrows). Nephrin’s cytoplasmic region recruits a variety of signaling molecules that regulate cytoskeletal organization and FP shape as well as barrier turnover, each of which contributes to SD maintenance post-injury.
Figure 2Nephrin tyrosine phosphorylation regulates a diverse group of signaling processes within the podocyte. Nephrin is a single pass transmembrane protein and contains a singular extracellular (ER), transmembrane (TR), and cytoplasmic (CR) region. Nephrin’s ER contains 1 Fibronectin-like III (FNIII) motif and eight Immunoglobulin (IgG)-like regions, which allow for homophilic interactions of nephrin molecules in trans. Tyrosine residues embedded in nephrin’s CR can be loosely classified into two categories, denoted as group A or B tyrosines, based largely on their flanking sequences. These consensus sequences are conserved and influence the adaptor molecules and downstream signaling effectors that can be recruited to nephrin upon their tyrosine phosphorylation. Interactions with each group contributes to cytoskeletal organization (through Cas-Crk/1/2/L, Nck-N-WASp/Pak and/or PLC-γ1) and nephrin’s phospho-regulation [through protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs)], denoted in purple. Alternatively, cell survival signaling appears to be largely restricted to signaling at group A residues (through p85/PI3K-AKT), denoted in blue, while nephrin trafficking is influenced by group B signaling (through ShcA), denoted in red.