Beckerman Pazit, Bi-Karchin Jing, Park Ae Seo Deok, Qiu Chengxiang, Dummer Patrick D, Soomro Irfana, Boustany-Kari Carine M, Pullen Steven S, Miner Jeffrey H, Hu Chien-An A, Rohacs Tibor, Inoue Kazunori, Ishibe Shuta, Saleem Moin A, Palmer Matthew B, Cuervo Ana Maria, Kopp Jeffrey B, Susztak Katalin
Renal Electrolyte and Hypertension Division, Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Kidney Disease Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Nat Med. 2017 Apr;23(4):429-438. doi: 10.1038/nm.4287. Epub 2017 Feb 20.
African Americans have a heightened risk of developing chronic and end-stage kidney disease, an association that is largely attributed to two common genetic variants, termed G1 and G2, in the APOL1 gene. Direct evidence demonstrating that these APOL1 risk alleles are pathogenic is still lacking because the APOL1 gene is present in only some primates and humans; thus it has been challenging to demonstrate experimental proof of causality of these risk alleles for renal disease. Here we generated mice with podocyte-specific inducible expression of the APOL1 reference allele (termed G0) or each of the risk-conferring alleles (G1 or G2). We show that mice with podocyte-specific expression of either APOL1 risk allele, but not of the G0 allele, develop functional (albuminuria and azotemia), structural (foot-process effacement and glomerulosclerosis) and molecular (gene-expression) changes that closely resemble human kidney disease. Disease development was cell-type specific and likely reversible, and the severity correlated with the level of expression of the risk allele. We further found that expression of the risk-variant APOL1 alleles interferes with endosomal trafficking and blocks autophagic flux, which ultimately leads to inflammatory-mediated podocyte death and glomerular scarring. In summary, this is the first demonstration that the expression of APOL1 risk alleles is causal for altered podocyte function and glomerular disease in vivo.
非裔美国人患慢性肾病和终末期肾病的风险更高,这种关联很大程度上归因于载脂蛋白L1(APOL1)基因中的两种常见基因变异,称为G1和G2。由于APOL1基因仅存在于某些灵长类动物和人类中,因此仍缺乏直接证据证明这些APOL1风险等位基因具有致病性;因此,要证明这些风险等位基因与肾脏疾病之间因果关系的实验证据具有挑战性。在这里,我们构建了在足细胞中特异性诱导表达APOL1参考等位基因(称为G0)或每种风险等位基因(G1或G2)的小鼠。我们发现,足细胞特异性表达任何一种APOL1风险等位基因而非G0等位基因的小鼠,会出现功能(蛋白尿和氮质血症)、结构(足突消失和肾小球硬化)和分子(基因表达)变化,这些变化与人类肾脏疾病非常相似。疾病发展具有细胞类型特异性且可能是可逆的,其严重程度与风险等位基因的表达水平相关。我们进一步发现,风险变异APOL1等位基因的表达会干扰内体运输并阻断自噬流,最终导致炎症介导的足细胞死亡和肾小球瘢痕形成。总之,这是首次证明APOL1风险等位基因的表达在体内导致足细胞功能改变和肾小球疾病。