| Literature DB >> 31534055 |
Valentina Benedetti1, Angelo Michele Lavecchia1, Monica Locatelli1, Valerio Brizi1, Daniela Corna1, Marta Todeschini1, Rubina Novelli1, Ariela Benigni1, Carlamaria Zoja1, Giuseppe Remuzzi1,2, Christodoulos Xinaris1.
Abstract
Thyroid hormone (TH) signaling is a universal regulator of metabolism, growth, and development. Here, we show that TH-TH receptor (TH-TR) axis alterations are critically involved in diabetic nephropathy-associated (DN-associated) podocyte pathology, and we identify TRα1 as a key regulator of the pathogenesis of DN. In ZSF1 diabetic rats, T3 levels progressively decreased during DN, and this was inversely correlated with metabolic and renal disease worsening. These phenomena were associated with the reexpression of the fetal isoform TRα1 in podocytes and parietal cells of both rats and patients with DN and with the increased glomerular expression of the TH-inactivating enzyme deiodinase 3 (DIO3). In diabetic rats, TRα1-positive cells also reexpressed several fetal mesenchymal and damage-related podocyte markers, while glomerular and podocyte hypertrophy was evident. In vitro, exposing human podocytes to diabetes milieu typical components markedly increased TRα1 and DIO3 expression and induced cytoskeleton rearrangements, adult podocyte marker downregulation and fetal kidney marker upregulation, the maladaptive cell cycle induction/arrest, and TRα1-ERK1/2-mediated hypertrophy. Strikingly, T3 treatment reduced TRα1 and DIO3 expression and completely reversed all these alterations. Our data show that diabetic stress induces the TH-TRα1 axis to adopt a fetal ligand/receptor relationship pattern that triggers the recapitulation of the fetal podocyte phenotype and subsequent pathological alterations.Entities:
Keywords: Cell Biology; Chronic kidney disease; Diabetes; Molecular biology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31534055 PMCID: PMC6795387 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.130249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708