Miyaki Takayuki, Xu Jingyuan, Sugiura Makoto, Kaneda Hisako, Trejo Juan Alejandro Oliva, Kawasaki Yuto, Omotehara Takuya, Negishi-Koga Takako, Ishijima Muneaki, Yamaguchi Junji, Kakuta Soichiro, Ichimura Koichiro
Department of Anatomy and Life Structure, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-1-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo, 113-8421, Japan.
Department of Medicine for Orthopedics and Motor Organ, Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Cell Tissue Res. 2025 Aug 29. doi: 10.1007/s00441-025-04002-z.
Podocytes are a type of epithelial cells that form the kidney nephron and are essential for ultrafiltration in the glomerulus. The majority of nephron constituent cells have primary cilia, which play an important role in the maintenance of normal tubular architecture of nephron. However, whether podocytes have primary cilia was only partially understood. In general, immunohistochemistry with an anti-acetylated α-tubulin antibody is often used to visualize primary cilia. α-Tubulin is highly acetylated throughout podocytes, and this antibody is not suitable to determine the presence or absence of primary cilia in podocytes, which is one reason why the presence of primary cilia in podocytes has remained unclear. In the present study, we determined the presence or absence of primary cilia in mature podocytes of six vertebrate species using a recently reported array tomography workflow optimized for whole glomerulus analysis. The proportion of podocytes with primary cilia tended to decrease with evolution as follows: 89.6% in river lampreys (Agnatha), 42.1% in zebrafish (Osteichthyes), 43.3% in African clawed frogs (Amphibia), 17.3% in Reeves' turtles (Reptilia), 10.4% in common quails (Aves), and 0.0% in Wistar rats (Mammalia). Our previous study has reported that, in rats, primary cilia are present in podocytes during development and disappear in mature podocytes. In other words, primary cilia disappear from podocytes during both phylogeny and ontogeny in vertebrates. We discuss the triggers and significance of primary cilium disappearance from vertebrate podocytes.
足细胞是一种上皮细胞,构成肾单位,对肾小球的超滤作用至关重要。大多数肾单位组成细胞都有初级纤毛,其在维持肾单位正常肾小管结构中发挥重要作用。然而,足细胞是否有初级纤毛仅得到部分了解。一般来说,使用抗乙酰化α-微管蛋白抗体的免疫组织化学方法常被用于观察初级纤毛。α-微管蛋白在整个足细胞中高度乙酰化,这种抗体不适用于确定足细胞中初级纤毛的有无,这也是足细胞中初级纤毛的存在情况一直不明确的原因之一。在本研究中,我们使用最近报道的针对整个肾小球分析优化的阵列断层扫描工作流程,确定了六种脊椎动物成熟足细胞中初级纤毛的有无。有初级纤毛的足细胞比例倾向于随着进化而降低,具体如下:七鳃鳗(无颌纲)中为89.6%,斑马鱼(硬骨鱼纲)中为42.1%,非洲爪蟾(两栖纲)中为43.3%,中华鳖(爬行纲)中为17.3%,普通鹌鹑(鸟纲)中为10.4%,Wistar大鼠(哺乳纲)中为0.0%。我们之前的研究报道过,在大鼠中,发育期间足细胞中有初级纤毛,而在成熟足细胞中消失。换句话说,在脊椎动物的系统发育和个体发育过程中,初级纤毛都从足细胞中消失。我们讨论了脊椎动物足细胞中初级纤毛消失的触发因素和意义。