| Literature DB >> 32849923 |
Christos Masaoutis1, Samer Al Besher1, Ioannis Koutroulis2, Stamatios Theocharis1.
Abstract
The biomarkers commonly utilized in diagnostic evaluations of kidney disease suffer from low sensitivity, especially in the early stages of renal damage. On the other hand, obtaining a renal biopsy to augment clinical decision making can lead to potentially serious complications. In order to overcome the shortcomings of currently available diagnostic tools, recent studies suggest that exosomes, cell-secreted extracellular vesicles containing a large array of active molecules to facilitate cell-to-cell communication, may represent a rich source of novel disease biomarkers. Because of their endocytic origin, exosomes carry markers typical for their parent cells, which could permit the localization of biochemical cellular alterations in specific kidney compartments. Different types of exosomes can be isolated from noninvasively obtained biofluids; however, in the context of kidney disease, evidence has emerged on the role of urinary exosomes in the diagnostic and predictive modeling of renal pathology. The current review summarizes the potential application of exosomes in the detection of acute and chronic inflammatory, metabolic, degenerative, and genetic renal diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32849923 PMCID: PMC7441435 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8897833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Markers ISSN: 0278-0240 Impact factor: 3.434
Urinary exosomal biomarkers potentially useful in the recognition of early damage patients (pts)/control (ctr).
| Condition | Potential exosomal biomarker | Study subjects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CKD | Ceruloplasmin ↑ | 51 pts-15 ctrs; rats | [ |
| miR-181a-5p ↑, among 30 differentially expressed ncRNAs | 15 pts-10 ctrs | [ | |
| Exosomal miR-451 ↑ | 38 pts-23 ctrs | [ | |
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| Lupus nephritis | miR-150 and miR-21 ↑; miR-29c ↓ | 45 pts-20 ctrs | [ |
| miR-146a ↑ | 38 pts-12 ctrs | [ | |
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| Diabetic kidney disease | Among 22 proteins: MASP2 and CALB1 ↑; S100A8 and S100A9 ↓ | 60 pts-15 ctrs | [ |
| miR-21-5p ↑; miR-30b-5p ↓ | 66 pts | [ | |
| miR-15b, miR-34a, and miR-636 | 54 pts-12 ctrs | [ | |
| Myeloblastin, elafin, cystatin B and neutrophil gelatinase-associated Lipocalin ↑ | 37 pts-12 ctrs | [ | |
| Regucalcin ↓ | 4 pts-3 ctrs; rats | [ | |
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| Nephronophthisis | 156 differentially expressed proteins | 12 pts-12 ctrs | [ |
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| Acute kidney injury in critical disease | Activating transcriptional factor 3 ↑ | 8 pts-8 ctrs; mice | [ |
| Fetuin-A ↑ | 6 pts; rats | [ | |
Urinary exosomal biomarkers potentially useful in disease monitoring and/or management patients (pts)/control (ctr).
| Condition | Potential exosomal biomarker | Study subjects | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lupus nephritis | Prediction of clinical response | miR-31, miR-107, and miR-135b-5p ↑ | 57 pts | [ |
| Disease flare | let-7a and miR-21 ↓ | 34 pts | [ | |
| Cellular crescent formation in type IV lupus nephritis | miR-3135b, miR-654-5p, and miR-146a-5p ↑ | 14 pts-3 ctrs | [ | |
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| IgA nephropathy | Tubulointerstitial inflammation and C3 deposition | CCL2 mRNA ↑ | 55 pts-24 ctrs | [ |
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| Nephropathy in type 1 diabetes | Various degrees of albuminuria | Various differentially expressed miRNAs | 48 pts | [ |
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| Nephropathy in type 2 diabetes | Decline in renal function | Uromodulin mRNA ↑ | 242 pts and ctrs | [ |
| Progression of albuminuria | C-megalin | 33 pts-11 ctrs | [ | |
| Macroalbuminuria | miR-362-3p, miR-877-3p, and miR-150-5p ↑; urinary miR-15a-5p ↓ | 5 pts-5 ctrs | [ | |
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| AL amyloidosis | Active amyloid formation | Light chain oligomers | 4 pts-1 ctr | [ |
| 13 pts-1 ctr | [ | |||
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| Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease | eGFR decline | AQP-2 ↓; APO-A1 ↑ | 46 pts-11 ctrs | [ |
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| Cystinuria | eGFR value | 165 differentially expressed proteins | 8 pts-10 ctrs | [ |
Exosomal biomarkers associated with specific etiological factors of renal disease patients (pts)/control (ctr).
| Condition | Potential exosomal biomarker | Study subjects | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medullary sponge kidney | vs. idiopathic calcium nephrolithiasis | Blood FCN1 and C4BPB proteins ↑; blood MASP2 protein ↓ | 15 pts-15 ctrs | [ |
| vs. autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease | Mainly urinary CD133 ↓, among 34 discriminative urinary EV proteins | 15 pts-15 ctrs | [ | |
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| Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease | Urinary periplakin, envoplakin, villin-1, and complement C3 and C9 ↑, among 30 proteins | 34 pts-32 ctrs | [ | |
| Urinary PC1/TMEM2 or PC2/TMEM2 ↓ | 13 pts-18 ctrs | [ | ||
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| Diabetic nephropathy | vs. minimal change nephrotic syndrome | Urinary WT1 mRNA ↑ | 20 pts-5 ctrs | [ |
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| Cadmium-induced nephrotoxicity | Blood MT1DP lncRNA ↑ | 100 persons | [ | |
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| Idiopathic membranous nephropathy | Blood and urinary MUC3A circRNA and various snoRNAs ↑ | 10 pts-10 ctrs | [ | |
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| Pediatric idiopathic nephrotic syndrome | Urinary miR-194-5p, miR-146b-5p, miR-378a-3p, miR-23b-3p, and miR-30a-5p ↑ | 129 pts-126 ctrs | [ | |
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| Pediatric primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis | vs. minimal change disease | Urinary miR-193a | 13 pts | [ |
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| IgA nephropathy | vs. thin basement membrane nephropathy | Urinary miR-215-5p and miR-378i ↑; urinary miR-29c and miR-205-5p ↓ | 18 pts-18 ctrs | [ |
| Urinary aminopeptidase N, vasorin precursor, | 12 pts-7 ctrs | [ | ||
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| Acute rejection | vs. BK nephropathy or chronic allograft injury | Urinary CLCA1, PROS1, KIAA0753, and ApoM ↑ | 30 pts-20 ctrs | [ |
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| Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis | vs. steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome | Urinary WT-1 ↑ | 25 pts-5 ctrs | [ |
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| Bartter syndrome type 1 | Urinary NKCC2 protein ↓ | 2 pts | [ | |
Urinary exosomal biomarkers associated with injury localized to a specific cellular or subcellular component of the nephron patients (pts)/control (ctr).
| Condition | Potential exosomal biomarker | Study subjects | Reference | |
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| Podocyte injury | In diabetic nephropathy | Elf3 protein ↑ | 50 pts-5 ctrs | [ |
| WT1, podocin, Actn4, CD2AP, and nephrin mRNA ↑ | 20 pts-5 ctrs | [ | ||
| In minimal change nephrotic syndrome | Podocin, Actn4, CD2AP, and nephrin mRNA ↑ | |||
| In metabolic syndrome-related kidney disease | Podocyte-derived exosomes (nephrin+/podocalyxin+) ↑ | 16 pts-15 ctrs | [ | |
| In CKD | miR-21 ↑ | 41 pts-5 ctrs | [ | |
| In cellular crescent formation | SFP1 ↑ | 37 pts | [ | |
| In renovascular hypertension | Podocyte-derived exosomes (nephrin+/podocalyxin+) ↑ | 31 pts-45 ctrs | [ | |
| In lupus nephritis | miR-29c ↓ | 24 pts-8 ctrs; mice | [ | |
| In IgA nephropathy | ||||
| In focal segmental glomerulosclerosis | WT-1 ↑ | 25 pts-5 ctrs | [ | |
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| Proximal tubular injury | In decompensated cirrhosis | Maltase glucoamylase ↑ | 24 pts | [ |
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| Renal fibrosis | In CKD | Nonproximal tubule-derived miR-200b ↑ | 38 pts | [ |
| miR-29c ↓ | 32 pts-7 and ctrs | [ | ||
| CD2AP mRNA ↓ | 32 pts-7 ctrs | [ | ||
| In lupus nephritis | miR-29c ↓ | 47pts-20 ctrs | [ | |
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| Peritubular capillary loss | In hypertension | Endothelial-derived EVs (PL-VAP+/CD31+/CD144+) ↑ | 38 pts-14 ctrs | [ |
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| Mitochondrial dysfunction | In diabetic nephropathy | 12 mitochondria-specific metabolites ↓ | 149 pts-23 ctrs | [ |
Figure 1Exosomal biomarkers reflecting alterations in compartments of the nephron.