Chowdhury T A, Dyer P H, Kumar S, Barnett A H, Bain S C
Department of Medicine, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, Bordesley Green East, Birmingham B9 5SS, U.K.
Clin Sci (Lond). 1999 Mar;96(3):221-30.
Diabetic nephropathy is the most serious complication of diabetes mellitus. Progression of the condition leads to end-stage renal failure, and other complications of diabetes are also common in this group of patients. The onset of overt albuminuria in a patient with diabetes heralds an increased risk of death, particularly from cardiovascular disease. There is considerable evidence to show that nephropathy is influenced by genetic factors. Epidemiological studies show that only a minority of patients with diabetes develop nephropathy irrespective of glycaemic control, suggesting that a subgroup of patients are at higher risk of nephropathy. Marked ethnic variation is observed, with nephropathy being more common in certain ethnic groups. Familial clustering of nephropathy is also observed. Parental history of hypertension, diabetes or cardiovascular disease appears to predispose to nephropathy in patients with diabetes. A number of methods are available to dissect polygenic disease: animal models, genetic association studies (case-control studies), affected sib-pair studies, discordant sib-pair studies and transmission distortion analysis. Most published work has been based on association studies. Association studies have shown conflicting results often due to small numbers of cases and controls, and poor phenotypic characterization. The angiotensin-converting enzyme gene insertion (I)/deletion (D) polymorphism has been studied in detail, but does not appear to be a strong risk marker for nephropathy. It does, however, appear to have a role in response to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition, with II homozygotes being the most responsive and DD homozygotes the least. A number of other genetic loci have also shown positive associations with nephropathy, including apolipoprotein E, heparan sulphate and aldose reductase. More recently, affected sib-pair analysis and discordant sib-pair analysis have suggested possible genetic loci on chromosomes 3, 7, 9, 12 and 20. These have yet to be reproduced in larger numbers of families, and the specific gene regions on these chromosomes remain elusive. The evidence presented in this review strongly supports the role of genetic factors in nephropathy. Detection of strong genetic risk markers for nephropathy will allow further insights into the pathogenesis of nephropathy, and possibly the development of novel therapeutic agents for its treatment. It will also allow preventive therapy to be directed at those patients with the greatest risk for development of diabetic nephropathy.
糖尿病肾病是糖尿病最严重的并发症。病情进展会导致终末期肾衰竭,糖尿病的其他并发症在这类患者中也很常见。糖尿病患者出现显性蛋白尿预示着死亡风险增加,尤其是心血管疾病导致的死亡风险。有大量证据表明肾病受遗传因素影响。流行病学研究表明,无论血糖控制情况如何,只有少数糖尿病患者会发展为肾病,这表明有一部分患者患肾病的风险更高。观察到明显的种族差异,肾病在某些种族群体中更为常见。还观察到肾病的家族聚集现象。糖尿病患者的父母有高血压、糖尿病或心血管疾病史似乎易患肾病。有多种方法可用于剖析多基因疾病:动物模型、基因关联研究(病例对照研究)、患病同胞对研究、不一致同胞对研究和传递不平衡分析。大多数已发表的研究基于关联研究。关联研究结果往往相互矛盾,这通常是由于病例和对照数量较少以及表型特征描述不佳所致。血管紧张素转换酶基因插入(I)/缺失(D)多态性已得到详细研究,但似乎并非肾病的强风险标志物。然而,它似乎在对血管紧张素转换酶抑制的反应中起作用,其中II型纯合子反应性最强,DD型纯合子反应性最弱。其他一些基因位点也显示与肾病呈正相关,包括载脂蛋白E、硫酸乙酰肝素和醛糖还原酶。最近,患病同胞对分析和不一致同胞对分析表明,3号、7号、9号、12号和20号染色体上可能存在基因位点。这些结果尚未在更多家庭中得到验证,这些染色体上的具体基因区域仍不明确。本综述中提供的证据有力地支持了遗传因素在肾病中的作用。检测肾病的强遗传风险标志物将有助于进一步了解肾病的发病机制,并可能开发出治疗肾病的新型治疗药物。这也将使预防性治疗能够针对那些患糖尿病肾病风险最高的患者。