Division of Nephrology, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
JCI Insight. 2022 Jun 8;7(11):e157432. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.157432.
COVID-19 infection causes collapse of glomerular capillaries and loss of podocytes, culminating in a severe kidney disease called COVID-19-associated nephropathy (COVAN). The underlying mechanism of COVAN is unknown. We hypothesized that cytokines induced by COVID-19 trigger expression of pathogenic APOL1 via JAK/STAT signaling, resulting in podocyte loss and COVAN phenotype. Here, based on 9 biopsy-proven COVAN cases, we demonstrated for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, that APOL1 protein was abundantly expressed in podocytes and glomerular endothelial cells (GECs) of COVAN kidneys but not in controls. Moreover, a majority of patients with COVAN carried 2 APOL1 risk alleles. We show that recombinant cytokines induced by SARS-CoV-2 acted synergistically to drive APOL1 expression through the JAK/STAT pathway in primary human podocytes, GECs, and kidney micro-organoids derived from a carrier of 2 APOL1 risk alleles, but expression was blocked by a JAK1/2 inhibitor, baricitinib. We demonstrate that cytokine-induced JAK/STAT/APOL1 signaling reduced the viability of kidney organoid podocytes but was rescued by baricitinib. Together, our results support the conclusion that COVID-19-induced cytokines are sufficient to drive COVAN-associated podocytopathy via JAK/STAT/APOL1 signaling and that JAK inhibitors could block this pathogenic process. These findings suggest JAK inhibitors may have therapeutic benefits for managing cytokine-induced, APOL1-mediated podocytopathy.
COVID-19 感染导致肾小球毛细血管塌陷和足细胞丧失,最终导致一种严重的肾脏疾病,称为 COVID-19 相关肾病(COVAN)。COVAN 的潜在机制尚不清楚。我们假设 COVID-19 诱导的细胞因子通过 JAK/STAT 信号触发致病性 APOL1 的表达,导致足细胞丢失和 COVAN 表型。在这里,基于 9 例经活检证实的 COVAN 病例,我们首次证明,据我们所知,APOL1 蛋白在 COVAN 肾脏的足细胞和肾小球内皮细胞(GEC)中大量表达,但在对照中没有表达。此外,大多数 COVAN 患者携带 2 个 APOL1 风险等位基因。我们表明,SARS-CoV-2 诱导的重组细胞因子通过 JAK/STAT 途径在携带 2 个 APOL1 风险等位基因的载体的原代人足细胞、GEC 和肾脏类器官中协同作用诱导 APOL1 表达,但表达被 JAK1/2 抑制剂巴瑞替尼阻断。我们证明,细胞因子诱导的 JAK/STAT/APOL1 信号降低了肾脏类器官足细胞的活力,但被巴瑞替尼挽救。总之,我们的结果支持这样的结论,即 COVID-19 诱导的细胞因子通过 JAK/STAT/APOL1 信号足以驱动 COVAN 相关的足细胞病,而 JAK 抑制剂可以阻断这一致病过程。这些发现表明,JAK 抑制剂可能对管理细胞因子诱导的、APOL1 介导的足细胞病具有治疗益处。