First Department of Internal Medicine, University of Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Japan.
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2017 Nov 1;32(11):1818-1830. doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfx047.
Podocyte depletion causes glomerulosclerosis, with persistent podocyte loss being a major factor driving disease progression. Urinary podocyte mRNA is potentially useful for monitoring disease progression in both animal models and in humans. To determine whether the same principles apply to crescentic glomerular injury, a rat model of anti-glomerular basement membrane (anti-GBM) nephritis was studied in parallel with a patient with anti-GBM nephritis.
Podocyte loss was measured by Wilms' Tumor 1-positive podocyte nuclear counting and density, glomerular epithelial protein 1 or synaptopodin-positive podocyte tuft area and urinary podocyte mRNA excretion rate. Glomerulosclerosis was evaluated by Azan staining and urinary transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 mRNA excretion rate.
In the rat model, sequential kidney biopsies revealed that after a threshold of 30% podocyte loss, the degree of glomerulosclerosis was linearly associated with the degree of podocyte depletion, compatible with podocyte depletion driving the sclerotic process. Urinary podocyte mRNA correlated with the rate of glomerular podocyte loss. In treatment studies, steroids prevented glomerulosclerosis in the anti-GBM model in contrast to angiotensin II inhibition, which lacked a protective effect, and urinary podocyte and TGF-β1 mRNA markers more accurately reflected both the amount of podocyte depletion and the degree of glomerulosclerosis compared with proteinuria under both scenarios. In a patient successfully treated for anti-GBM nephritis, urinary podocyte and TGB-β1 mRNA reflected treatment efficacy.
These results emphasize the role of podocyte depletion in anti-GBM nephritis and suggest that urinary podocyte and TGF-β1 mRNA could serve as markers of disease progression and treatment efficacy.
足细胞耗竭导致肾小球硬化,持续的足细胞丢失是驱动疾病进展的主要因素。尿足细胞 mRNA 可能对监测动物模型和人类的疾病进展有用。为了确定这一原则是否同样适用于新月体性肾小球损伤,我们平行研究了抗肾小球基底膜 (anti-GBM) 肾炎的大鼠模型和一例抗 GBM 肾炎患者。
通过 Wilms' Tumor 1 阳性足细胞核计数和密度、肾小球上皮蛋白 1 或突触蛋白阳性足细胞毛簇面积和尿足细胞 mRNA 排泄率来衡量足细胞丢失。肾小球硬化通过 Azan 染色和尿转化生长因子 (TGF)-β1 mRNA 排泄率进行评估。
在大鼠模型中,连续肾活检显示,在 30%的足细胞丢失阈值之后,肾小球硬化的程度与足细胞耗竭的程度呈线性相关,这与足细胞耗竭驱动硬化过程相符。尿足细胞 mRNA 与肾小球足细胞丢失率相关。在治疗研究中,与血管紧张素 II 抑制缺乏保护作用相反,类固醇可预防抗 GBM 模型中的肾小球硬化,尿足细胞和 TGF-β1 mRNA 标志物在两种情况下比蛋白尿更准确地反映了足细胞耗竭的程度和肾小球硬化的程度。在一例成功治疗抗 GBM 肾炎的患者中,尿足细胞和 TGF-β1 mRNA 反映了治疗效果。
这些结果强调了足细胞耗竭在抗 GBM 肾炎中的作用,并表明尿足细胞和 TGF-β1 mRNA 可作为疾病进展和治疗效果的标志物。