Walsh David W, Roxburgh Sarah A, McGettigan Paul, Berthier Celine C, Higgins Desmond G, Kretzler Matthias, Cohen Clemens D, Mezzano Sergio, Brazil Derek P, Martin Finian
UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science, Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Ireland.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 2008 Jan;1782(1):10-21. doi: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2007.09.005. Epub 2007 Oct 11.
Diabetic nephropathy is currently the leading cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide, and occurs in approximately one third of all diabetic patients. The molecular pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy has not been fully characterized and novel mediators and drivers of the disease are still being described. Previous data from our laboratory has identified the developmentally regulated gene Gremlin as a novel target implicated in diabetic nephropathy in vitro and in vivo. We used bioinformatic analysis to examine whether Gremlin gene sequence and structure could be used to identify other genes implicated in diabetic nephropathy. The Notch ligand Jagged1 and its downstream effector, hairy enhancer of split-1 (Hes1), were identified as genes with significant similarity to Gremlin in terms of promoter structure and predicted microRNA binding elements. This led us to discover that transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta1), a primary driver of cellular changes in the kidney during nephropathy, increased Gremlin, Jagged1 and Hes1 expression in human kidney epithelial cells. Elevated levels of Gremlin, Jagged1 and Hes1 were also detected in extracts from renal biopsies from diabetic nephropathy patients, but not in control living donors. In situ hybridization identified specific upregulation and co-expression of Gremlin, Jagged1 and Hes1 in the same tubuli of kidneys from diabetic nephropathy patients, but not controls. Finally, Notch pathway gene clustering showed that samples from diabetic nephropathy patients grouped together, distinct from both control living donors and patients with minimal change disease. Together, these data suggest that Notch pathway gene expression is elevated in diabetic nephropathy, co-incident with Gremlin, and may contribute to the pathogenesis of this disease.
糖尿病肾病目前是全球终末期肾病的主要病因,约三分之一的糖尿病患者会发生该病。糖尿病肾病的分子发病机制尚未完全明确,仍在不断发现该疾病的新介质和驱动因素。我们实验室之前的数据已确定发育调控基因Gremlin是糖尿病肾病在体外和体内的一个新靶点。我们利用生物信息学分析来研究Gremlin基因序列和结构是否可用于识别其他与糖尿病肾病相关的基因。Notch配体Jagged1及其下游效应因子分裂增强子-1(Hes1)被确定为在启动子结构和预测的微小RNA结合元件方面与Gremlin具有显著相似性的基因。这使我们发现,肾病期间肾脏细胞变化的主要驱动因素转化生长因子-β1(TGFbeta1)可增加人肾上皮细胞中Gremlin、Jagged1和Hes1的表达。在糖尿病肾病患者肾活检组织提取物中也检测到Gremlin、Jagged1和Hes1水平升高,但在对照活体供体中未检测到。原位杂交确定了Gremlin、Jagged1和Hes1在糖尿病肾病患者而非对照患者的肾脏相同肾小管中特异性上调并共表达。最后,Notch通路基因聚类显示糖尿病肾病患者的样本聚集在一起,与对照活体供体和微小病变病患者均不同。总之,这些数据表明Notch通路基因表达在糖尿病肾病中升高,与Gremlin同时出现,可能参与了该疾病的发病机制。