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Abrogation of Protein Uptake through Megalin-Deficient Proximal Tubules Does Not Safeguard against Tubulointerstitial Injury

Item Type:Article
Title:Abrogation of Protein Uptake through Megalin-Deficient Proximal Tubules Does Not Safeguard against Tubulointerstitial Injury
Creators Name:Theilig, F., Kriz, W., Jerichow, T., Schrade, P., Hahnel, B., Willnow, T.E., Le Hir, M. and Bachmann, S.
Abstract:Sustained proteinuria and tubulointerstitial damage have been closely linked with progressive renal failure. Upon excess protein endocytosis, tubular epithelial cells are thought to produce mediators that promote inflammation, tubular degeneration, and fibrosis. This concept was tested in a transgenic mouse model with megalin deficiency. Application of an anti-glomerular basement membrane serum to transgenic megalin-deficient mice [Cre(+)/GN] and megalin-positive littermates [Cre(-)/GN] produced the typical glomerulonephritis (GN) with heavy proteinuria in both groups. Tubulointerstitial damages correlated closely with glomerular damages in pooled Cre(+)/GN and Cre(-)/GN mice. Owing to a mosaic pattern of megalin expression in the mutant mice, Cre(+)/GN kidneys permitted side-by-side analysis of megalin-deficient and megalin-positive tubules in the same kidney. Protein endocytosis was found only in megalin-positive cells. TGF-beta, intercellular adhesion molecule, vascular cellular adhesion molecule, endothelin-1, and cell proliferation were high in megalin-positive cells, whereas apoptosis, heat-shock protein 25, and osteopontin were enhanced in megalin-deficient cells. No fibrotic changes were associated with either phenotype. Tubular degeneration with interstitial inflammation was found only in nephrons with extensive crescentic lesions at the glomerulotubular junction. In sum, enhanced protein endocytosis indeed led to an upregulation of profibrotic mediators in a megalin-dependent way; however, there was no evidence that endocytosis played a pathogenetic role in the development of the tubulointerstitial disease.
Keywords:Apoptosis, Chemokine CCL2, Endocytosis, Heat-Shock Proteins, Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1, Kidney Glomerulus, Proximal Kidney Tubules, LDL-Receptor Related Protein 2, Electron Microscopy, Mosaicism, Neoplasm Proteins, Interstitial Nephritis, Osteopontin, Proteinuria, Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1, Knockout Mice, Animals, Mice
Source:Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
ISSN:1046-6673
Publisher:American Society of Nephrology
Volume:18
Number:6
Page Range:1824-1834
Date:June 2007
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2006111266
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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