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1.
Kidney Int ; 94(6): 1111-1126, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30385042

ABSTRACT

Insufficient podocyte regeneration after injury is a central pathomechanism of glomerulosclerosis and chronic kidney disease. Podocytes constitutively secrete the chemokine CXCL12, which is known to regulate homing and activation of stem cells; hence we hypothesized a similar effect of CXCL12 on podocyte progenitors. CXCL12 blockade increased podocyte numbers and attenuated proteinuria in mice with Adriamycin-induced nephropathy. Similar studies in lineage-tracing mice revealed enhanced de novo podocyte formation from parietal epithelial cells in the setting of CXCL12 blockade. Super-resolution microscopy documented full integration of these progenitor-derived podocytes into the glomerular filtration barrier, interdigitating with tertiary foot processes of neighboring podocytes. Quantitative 3D analysis revealed that conventional 2D analysis underestimated the numbers of progenitor-derived podocytes. The 3D analysis also demonstrated differences between juxtamedullary and cortical nephrons in both progenitor endowment and Adriamycin-induced podocyte loss, with more robust podocyte regeneration in cortical nephrons with CXCL12 blockade. Finally, we found that delayed CXCL12 inhibition still had protective effects. In vitro studies found that CXCL12 inhibition uncoupled Notch signaling in podocyte progenitors. These data suggest that CXCL12-driven podocyte-progenitor feedback maintains progenitor quiescence during homeostasis, but also limits their intrinsic capacity to regenerate lost podocytes, especially in cortical nephrons. CXCL12 inhibition could be an innovative therapeutic strategy in glomerular disorders.


Subject(s)
Aptamers, Nucleotide/pharmacology , Chemokine CXCL12/antagonists & inhibitors , Glomerulosclerosis, Focal Segmental/drug therapy , Regeneration/drug effects , Stem Cells/drug effects , Animals , Aptamers, Nucleotide/therapeutic use , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Chemokine CXCL12/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Doxorubicin/toxicity , Feedback, Physiological/drug effects , Glomerulosclerosis, Focal Segmental/chemically induced , Glomerulosclerosis, Focal Segmental/complications , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Male , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Microscopy, Confocal/methods , Podocytes/drug effects , Podocytes/pathology , Proteinuria/drug therapy , Proteinuria/etiology , Stem Cells/physiology , Treatment Outcome
2.
Nephrol Dial Transplant ; 33(8): 1292-1304, 2018 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28992221

ABSTRACT

Curing 'diabetic nephropathy' is considered an unmet medical need of high priority. We propose to question the concept of 'diabetic nephropathy' that implies diabetes as the predominant cause of kidney disease, which may not apply to the majority of type 2 diabetics approaching end-stage kidney disease. With the onset of diabetes, hyperglycaemia/sodium-glucose co-transporter-2-driven glomerular hyperfiltration promotes nephron hypertrophy, which, however, on its own, causes proteinuria not before a decade later, probably because podocyte hypertrophy can usually accommodate an increase in the filtration surface. In contrast, precedent chronic kidney disease (CKD), that is, few nephrons per body mass, e.g. due to poor nephron endowment from birth, obesity, pregnancy, or renal ageing or injury-related nephron loss, usually precedes the onset of type 2 diabetes. This applies in particular in older adults, and each on its own, but especially in combination, further aggravates single nephron hyperfiltration and glomerular hypertrophy. Whenever this additional hyperglycaemia-driven enlargement of the glomerular filtration surface exceeds the capacity of podocytes for hypertrophy, podocytes detachment leads to glomerulosclerosis and nephron loss, i.e. CKD progression. Animal models of 'diabetic nephropathy' based only on hyperglycaemia do not mimic this aspect and therefore poorly predict outcomes of clinical trials usually performed on elderly CKD patients with type 2 diabetes. Thus, we advocate the use of renal mass (nephron) ablation in type 2 diabetic animals to better mimic the pathophysiology of 'CKD with diabetes' in the target patient population and the use of the glomerular filtration rate as a primary endpoint to more reliably predict trial outcomes.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diabetic Nephropathies/epidemiology , Diabetic Nephropathies/etiology , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/standards , Kidney Failure, Chronic/epidemiology , Kidney Failure, Chronic/etiology , Pandemics , Animals , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/physiopathology , Humans
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