| Literature DB >> 33540508 |
Shipra Agrawal1,2, Richard F Ransom1,2, Saras Saraswathi3, Esperanza Garcia-Gonzalo4, Amy Webb5, Juan L Fernandez-Martinez4, Milan Popovic1, Adam J Guess1, Andrzej Kloczkowski2,3, Rainer Benndorf1,2, Wolfgang Sadee6, William E Smoyer1,2.
Abstract
Glucocorticoid (GC) resistance complicates the treatment of ~10-20% of children with nephrotic syndrome (NS), yet the molecular basis for resistance remains unclear. We used RNAseq analysis and in silico algorithm-based approaches on peripheral blood leukocytes from 12 children both at initial NS presentation and after ~7 weeks of GC therapy to identify a 12-gene panel able to differentiate steroid resistant NS (SRNS) from steroid-sensitive NS (SSNS). Among this panel, subsequent validation and analyses of one biologically relevant candidate, sulfatase 2 (SULF2), in up to a total of 66 children, revealed that both SULF2 leukocyte expression and plasma arylsulfatase activity Post/Pre therapy ratios were greater in SSNS vs. SRNS. However, neither plasma SULF2 endosulfatase activity (measured by VEGF binding activity) nor plasma VEGF levels, distinguished SSNS from SRNS, despite VEGF's reported role as a downstream mediator of SULF2's effects in glomeruli. Experimental studies of NS-related injury in both rat glomeruli and cultured podocytes also revealed decreased SULF2 expression, which were partially reversible by GC treatment of podocytes. These findings together suggest that SULF2 levels and activity are associated with GC resistance in NS, and that SULF2 may play a protective role in NS via the modulation of downstream mediators distinct from VEGF.Entities:
Keywords: FSGS; glucocorticoids; steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome; sulfatase 2; vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
Year: 2021 PMID: 33540508 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10030523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241