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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autosomal recessive Alport syndrome can arise from a mutation in either of the genes
COL4A3
and COL4A4 on chromosome 2, which encode, respectively, the alpha 3 and alpha 4 chains of Type IV collagen. This report describes a mutation in
COL4A3
in a girl who presented at age 5 with hematuria and
proteinuria
, lacking any family history of renal disease. Renal biopsy at age 8 showed immunoglobulin A nephropathy and Alport syndrome. Sensorineural deafness developed during adolescence, and the patient's renal disease progressed to terminal renal failure by age 20. She received a living related donor renal allograft at age 20 and developed antiglomerular basement membrane nephritis of the allograft 8 months after transplantation. Amplification and sequencing of exon 5 of
COL4A3
(counting from the 3' end of the gene) revealed a 7-base-pair deletion, producing a shift of the reading frame and the creation of a premature stop codon. Each parent was heterozygous for the normal and mutant exon 5 sequences. This mutation in
COL4A3
would result in the loss of 222 amino acids from the carboxy-terminal noncollagenous domain of the alpha 3(IV) chain. The mutant chain would be unable to form trimers with other Type IV collagen alpha chains. In addition, the mutant chain would lack the Goodpasture epitope, which resides in the carboxy-terminal noncollagenous domain of the alpha 3(IV) chain. The absence of this epitope may underly the subsequent development of anti-glomerular basement membrane nephritis in the allograft.
...
PMID:Autosomal recessive Alport syndrome: mutation in the COL4A3 gene in a woman with Alport syndrome and posttransplant antiglomerular basement membrane nephritis. 778 62
A mouse model for the autosomal form of Alport syndrome was produced. These mice develop a progressive glomerulonephritis with microhematuria and
proteinuria
, consistent with the human disease. End-stage renal disease develops at approximately 14 weeks of age. TEM analysis of the glomerular basement membranes (GBM) during development of renal pathology revealed focal multilaminated thickening and thinning beginning in the external capillary loops at 4 weeks and spreading throughout the GBM by 8 weeks. By 14 weeks, half of the glomeruli were fibrotic with collapsed capillaries. Immunofluorescence analysis of the GBM showed the absence of type IV collagen alpha-3, alpha-4, and alpha-5 chains and a persistence of alpha-1 and alpha-2 chains (these chains normally localize to the mesangial matrix). Northern blot analysis using probes specific for the collagen chains illustrate the absence of
COL4A3
in the knockout, whereas mRNAs for the remaining chains are unchanged. An accumulation of fibronectin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, laminin-1, and entactin was observed in the GBM of the affected animals. The temporal and spatial pattern of accumulation was consistent with that for thickening of the GBM as observed by TEM. Thus, expression of these basement membrane-associated proteins may be involved in the progression of Alport renal disease pathogenesis. The levels of mRNAs encoding the basement membrane-associated proteins at 7 weeks were unchanged.
...
PMID:Collagen COL4A3 knockout: a mouse model for autosomal Alport syndrome. 895 99
Recent genetic studies indicate that Alport syndrome and thin glomerular basement membrane disease (TMD) may both be due to
COL4A3
, COL4A4, and COL4A5 mutations, but there is continuing uncertainty concerning the diagnosis and management of patients without classic family history and symptoms. We examined kidney pathology and collagen alpha 3 to alpha 5(IV) expression in a series of 16 patients who presented with overlapping signs between TMD and Alport nephritis. All patients presented with hematuria, and 11 also had
proteinuria
, of whom 5 had nephrotic range
proteinuria
. Only 9 had family history of hematuria. In 9 of 16 (60%) we found premature glomerulosclerosis in the renal biopsies. Three of 16 had predominantly wide, lamellated glomerullar basement membranes (GBM), and in these, alpha 3 to alpha 5(IV) was absent in glomeruli or skin, diagnostic of Alport nephritis. One patient (12) had a very wide GBM with intramembranous lucencies but no lamellation. Skin biopsy was collagen alpha 5(IV) positive. Nine of 16 patients had predominantly thin GBM by electron microscopy, and 3 had thin and slightly lamellated GBM. Collagen alpha 3 to alpha 5(IV) expression in the kidney or skin biopsy was present in all of the latter 12 patients. Three patients had end-stage renal disease, 7 patients had hypertension, and 1 patient had chronic renal failure. We found that of the 16 patients with presumed TMD, 3 had X-linked Alport nephritis, 2 appeared to have autosomal recessive Alport nephritis, and the remaining patients had either an Alport or a TMD variant. The latter had histologic and/or clinical evidence of progressive renal disease, including premature glomerulosclerosis, hypertension, sustained
proteinuria
, and either thin or slight GBM lamellation focally, and preserved alpha 3 to alpha 5(IV) expression. These patients have a TMD variant, but an Alport variant with a potentially transmissible severe defect different from benign hematuria cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Histopathology, ultrastructure, and clinical phenotypes in thin glomerular basement membrane disease variants. 1220 17
Thin basement membrane nephropathy. Thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) is the most common cause of persistent glomerular bleeding in children and adults, and occurs in at least 1% of the population. Most affected individuals have, in addition to the hematuria, minimal
proteinuria
, normal renal function, a uniformly thinned glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and a family history of hematuria. Their clinical course is usually benign. However, some adults with TBMN have
proteinuria
>500 mg/day or renal impairment. This is more likely in hospital-based series of biopsied patients than in the uninvestigated, but affected, family members. The cause of renal impairment in TBMN is usually not known, but may be due to secondary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) or immunoglobulin A (IgA) glomerulonephritis, to misdiagnosed IgA disease or X-linked Alport syndrome, or because of coincidental disease. About 40% families with TBMN have hematuria that segregates with the
COL4A3
/COL4A4 locus, and many
COL4A3
and COL4A4 mutations have now been described. These genes are also affected in autosomal-recessive Alport syndrome, and at least some cases of TBMN represent the carrier state for this condition. Families with TBMN in whom hematuria does not segregate with the
COL4A3
/COL4A4 locus can be explained by de novo mutations, incomplete penetrance of hematuria, coincidental hematuria in family members without
COL4A3
or COL4A4 mutations, and by a novel gene locus for TBMN. A renal biopsy is warranted in TBMN only if there are atypical features, or if IgA disease or X-linked Alport syndrome cannot be excluded clinically. In IgA disease, there is usually no family history of hematuria. X-linked Alport syndrome is much less common than TBMN and can often be identified in family members by its typical clinical features (including retinopathy), a lamellated GBM without the collagen alpha3(IV), alpha4(IV), and alpha5(IV) chains, and by gene linkage studies or the demonstration of a COL4A5 mutation. Technical difficulties in the demonstration and interpretation of
COL4A3
and COL4A4 mutations mean that mutation detection is not used routinely in the diagnosis of TBMN.
...
PMID:Thin basement membrane nephropathy. 1296 34
Thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) is a common, lifelong condition affecting the kidneys that is characterized by microscopic glomerular hematuria, minimal or no
proteinuria
, and normal renal function. It often is discovered incidentally, and usually has an excellent prognosis. Many cases are familial and show autosomal-dominant inheritance. The defining characteristic is a glomerular basement membrane (GBM) that is thinned to about half its normal thickness on ultrastructural examination of the renal biopsy specimen. However, occasionally patients with TBMN develop marked
proteinuria
or renal impairment. It is unclear whether individuals with TBMN and impaired renal function represent part of the spectrum of TBMN associated with heterozygous
COL4A3
or COL4A4 mutations, or if their disease is caused by mutations of other genes, or whether it is caused by a second coexistent renal lesion or is misdiagnosed Alport syndrome.
...
PMID:The clinical features of thin basement membrane nephropathy. 1588 Mar 23
Type IV collagen is a predominant component of basement membranes, and glomeruli of a kidney filter approximately 70-90 liters of plasma every day through a specialized glomerular basement membrane (GBM). In Alport syndrome, a progressive disease primarily affecting kidneys, mutations in GBM-associated type IV collagen genes (
COL4A3
, COL4A4, or COL4A5) lead to basement membrane structural defects,
proteinuria
, renal failure, and an absence of all three GBM collagen triple helical chains because of obligatory posttranslational assembly requirements. Here, we demonstrate that transplantation of wild-type bone marrow (BM) into irradiated
COL4A3
(-/-) mice results in a possible recruitment of BM-derived progenitor cells as epithelial cells (podocytes) and mesangial cells within the damaged glomerulus, leading to a partial restoration of expression of the type IV collagen alpha3 chain with concomitant emergence of alpha4 and alpha5 chain expression, improved glomerular architecture associated with a significant reduction in
proteinuria
, and improvement in overall kidney histology compared with untreated
COL4A3
(-/-) mice or irradiated
COL4A3
(-/-) mice with BM from adult
COL4A3
(-/-) mice. The alpha3(IV) collagen produced by BM-derived podocytes integrates into the GBM and associates with other alpha-chains to form type IV collagen triple helical networks. This study demonstrates that BM-derived stem cells can offer a viable strategy for repairing basement membrane defects and conferring therapeutic benefit for patients with Alport syndrome.
...
PMID:Bone-marrow-derived stem cells repair basement membrane collagen defects and reverse genetic kidney disease. 1686 35
Multipotent mesenchymal stem or stromal cells (MSC) have shown to improve outcome of acute renal injury models, but whether MSC can delay renal failure in chronic kidney disease is not known. We injected primary MSC or saline into mice that lack the alpha3-chain of type IV collagen (
COL4A3
), a model of chronic kidney disease with close similarities to human Alport disease. Weekly injections of MSC from week 6 to 10 of life prevented the loss of peritubular capillaries and reduced markers of renal fibrosis, that is, interstitial volume, numbers of smooth muscle actin-positive interstitial cells, and interstitial collagen deposits as compared to saline-injected
COL4A3
-deficient mice. However, renal function, that is, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine levels,
proteinuria
as well as survival of
COL4A3
-deficient mice were not affected by MSC injections. Although MSC were found to localize to kidneys of
COL4A3
-deficient mice after injection, differentiation into renal cells was not detected. However, MSC expressed growth factors, that is, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and bone morphogenetic protein-7 under basal culture conditions. In fact, VEGF mRNA levels were increased in kidneys of MSC-injected
COL4A3
-deficient mice and MSC supernatants enhance endothelial cell proliferation in vitro. Thus, weekly injections with MSC prevent loss of peritubular capillaries possibly owing to local production of growth factors rather than by differentiation into renal cells. The maintenance of interstitial vasculature is associated with less interstitial fibrosis but, is insufficient to delay renal failure and survival of
COL4A3
-deficient mice.
...
PMID:Multipotent mesenchymal stem cells reduce interstitial fibrosis but do not delay progression of chronic kidney disease in collagen4A3-deficient mice. 1672 81
A heterozygous mutation in autosomal Alport genes
COL4A3
and COL4A4 can be found in 20 to 50% of individuals with familial benign hematuria and diffuse glomerular basement membrane thinning (thin basement membrane nephropathy [TBMN]). Approximately 1% of humans are heterozygous carriers of mutations in the autosomal Alport genes and at risk for developing renal failure as a result of TBMN. The incidence and pathogenesis of renal failure in heterozygous
COL4A3
/4 mutation carriers is still unclear and was examined further in this study using
COL4A3
knockout mice. In heterozygous
COL4A3
(+/-) mice lifespan, hematuria and renal function (serum urea and
proteinuria
) were monitored during a period of 3 yr, and renal tissue was examined by light and electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and Western blot. Lifespan of
COL4A3
(+/-) mice was found to be significantly shorter than in healthy controls (21.7 versus 30.3 mo). Persistent glomerular hematuria was detected starting in week 9;
proteinuria
of > 0.1 g/L started after 3 mo of life and increased to > 3 g/L after 24 mo. The glomerular basement membrane was significantly thinned (167 versus 200 nm in wild type) in 30-wk-old mice, coinciding with focal glomerulosclerosis, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, and increased levels of TGF-beta and connective tissue growth factor. The renal phenotype in
COL4A3
(+/-) mice resembled the clinical and histopathologic phenotype of human cases of TBMN with concomitant progression to chronic renal failure. Therefore, the
COL4A3
(+/-) mouse model will help in the understanding of the pathogenesis of TBMN in humans and in the evaluation of potential therapies.
...
PMID:Chronic renal failure and shortened lifespan in COL4A3+/- mice: an animal model for thin basement membrane nephropathy. 1677 36
Alport syndrome (AS) is a hereditary glomerulonephritis variably associated with neural hearing loss and ocular abnormalities. The prevalence of the disease is estimated at approximately 1 in 50,000 live births. AS arises from mutations in genes encoding alpha chains constituting type IV collagen. In 85% of patients, the disease results from mutations in the COL4A5 gene located on X chromosome. In the hemizygous male, persistent microhematuria is present from early life, then
proteinuria
and renal insufficiency occur with time, leading to end-stage renal failure before age 40. In the heterozygous female, clinical manifestations vary from completely healthy state to end-stage renal failure, most often reached after the age of 40. In 15% of patients, the disease results from mutations in either the
COL4A3
or the COL4A4 gene, both located on chromosome 2. When both alleles are mutated (autosomal recessive form), the phenotype is constantly severe, resembling that of the hemizygous male in the X-linked form. In the heterozygous individual, the clinical spectrum vary from the absence of any manifestation to the development of
proteinuria
- the so-called autosomal-dominant AS -, and even renal insufficiency, sometimes reaching end-stage (after the age of 40) through the most frequently encountered phenotype, i.e. a persistently isolated microhematuria, accounting for the so-called benign familial hematuria (or healthy carrier state). The determinants of the phenotype remain largely unknown, so that it may be risky to predict renal prognosis in the individual with a single
COL4A3
/A4 mutation and an isolated microhematuria at the time of examination.
...
PMID:[From Alport syndrome to benign familial hematuria: clinical and genetic aspect]. 1689 72
Mutations in the
COL4A3
/COL4A4 genes of type IV collagen have been found in approximately 40% of cases of thin basement membrane nephropathy, which is characterized by microscopic hematuria and is classically thought to cause
proteinuria
and chronic renal failure rarely. Here we report our observations of 116 subjects from 13 Cypriot families clinically affected with thin basement membrane nephropathy. These families first came to our attention because they segregated microscopic hematuria, mild
proteinuria
, and variable degrees of renal impairment, but a dual diagnosis of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and thin basement membrane nephropathy was made in 20 biopsied cases. Molecular studies identified founder mutations in both
COL4A3
and COL4A4 genes in 10 families. None of 82 heterozygous patients had any extrarenal manifestations, supporting the diagnosis of thin basement membrane nephropathy. During follow-up of up to three decades, 31 of these 82 patients (37.8%) developed chronic renal failure and 16 (19.5%) reached end-stage renal disease. Mutations G1334E and G871C were detected in seven and three families, respectively, and were probably introduced by founders. We conclude that these particular
COL4A3
/COL4A4 mutations either predispose some patients to FSGS and chronic renal failure, or that thin basement membrane nephropathy sometimes coexists with another genetic modifier that is responsible for FSGS and progressive renal failure. The findings presented here do not justify the labelling of thin basement membrane nephropathy as a benign condition with excellent prognosis.
...
PMID:COL4A3/COL4A4 mutations producing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and renal failure in thin basement membrane nephropathy. 1794 44
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