Literature DB >> 32311505

Extracellular matrix, integrins, and focal adhesion signaling in polycystic kidney disease.

Yan Zhang1, Gail Reif1, Darren P Wallace2.   

Abstract

In autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), the inexorable growth of numerous fluid-filled cysts leads to massively enlarged kidneys, renal interstitial damage, inflammation, and fibrosis, and progressive decline in kidney function. It has long been recognized that interstitial fibrosis is the most important manifestation associated with end-stage renal disease; however, the role of abnormal extracellular matrix (ECM) production on ADPKD pathogenesis is not fully understood. Early evidence showed that cysts in end-stage human ADPKD kidneys had thickened and extensively laminated cellular basement membranes, and abnormal regulation of gene expression of several basement membrane components, including collagens, laminins, and proteoglycans by cyst epithelial cells. These basement membrane changes were also observed in dilated tubules and small cysts of early ADPKD kidneys, indicating that ECM alterations were early features of cyst development. Renal cystic cells were also found to overexpress several integrins and their ligands, including ECM structural components and soluble matricellular proteins. ECM ligands binding to integrins stimulate focal adhesion formation and can promote cell attachment and migration. Abnormal expression of laminin-332 (laminin-5) and its receptor α6β4 stimulated cyst epithelial cell proliferation; and mice that lacked laminin α5, a component of laminin-511 normally expressed by renal tubules, had an overexpression of laminin-332 that was associated with renal cyst formation. Periostin, a matricellular protein that binds αVβ3- and αVβ5-integrins, was found to be highly overexpressed in the kidneys of ADPKD and autosomal recessive PKD patients, and several rodent models of PKD. αVβ3-integrin is also overexpressed by cystic epithelial cells, and the binding of periostin to αVβ3-integrin activates the integrin-linked kinase and downstream signal transduction pathways involved in tissue repair promoting cyst growth, ECM synthesis, and tissue fibrosis. This chapter reviews the roles of the ECM, integrins, and focal adhesion signaling in cyst growth and fibrosis in PKD.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease; Basement membrane; Cyst growth; ECM; Focal adhesion kinase; Integrin-linked kinase

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32311505      PMCID: PMC7269823          DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2020.109646

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Signal        ISSN: 0898-6568            Impact factor:   4.315


  117 in total

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Authors:  Darren P Wallace; Corey White; Lyudmyla Savinkova; Emily Nivens; Gail A Reif; Cibele S Pinto; Archana Raman; Stephen C Parnell; Simon J Conway; Timothy A Fields
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4.  Collagen I Modifies Connexin-43 Hemichannel Activity via Integrin α2β1 Binding in TGFβ1-Evoked Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells.

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