Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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The recent development of endothelin-1 (ET-1) antagonists and their potential use in the treatment of human disease raises questions as to the role of ET-1 in the pathophysiology of such cardiovascular ailments as hypertension, heart failure, renal failure and atherosclerosis. It is still unclear, for example, whether activation of an endogenous ET-1 system is itself the primary cause of any of these ailments. In that context, the phenotypic manifestations of chronic ET-1 overproduction may provide clues about the tissues and systems affected by ET-1. We therefore established two lines of transgenic mice overexpressing the ET-1 gene under the direction of its own promoter. These mice exhibited low body weight, diminished fur density and two- to fourfold increases in the ET-1 levels measured in plasma, heart, kidney and aorta. There were no apparent histological abnormalities in the visceral organs of young (8 weeks old) transgenic mice, nor was their blood pressure elevated. In aged (12 months old) transgenic mice, however, renal manifestations, including prominent interstitial fibrosis, renal cysts, glomerulosclerosis and narrowing of arterioles, were detected. These pathological changes were accompanied by decreased creatinine clearance, elevated urinary protein excretion and salt-dependent hypertension. It thus appears that mild, chronic overproduction of ET-1 does not primarily cause hypertension but triggers damaging changes in the kidney which lead to the susceptibility to salt-induced hypertension.
J Mol Med (Berl) 2002 Feb
PMID:Renal damage and salt-dependent hypertension in aged transgenic mice overexpressing endothelin-1. 1190 42

Glomerular disease is one of the most common causes of end-stage renal failure. Increasing evidence suggests that these glomerulopathies are frequently caused by primary lesions in the renal podocytes. One of the major consequences of podocyte lesions is the accumulation of mesangial matrix in the glomerular basement membrane, a process called glomerulosclerosis. Mesangial sclerosis is one of the most consistent findings in Denys-Drash patients and can be caused by dominant mutations in the Wilms' tumor 1 gene (WT1). The underlying mechanism, however, is poorly understood. WT1 is expressed in the podocytes throughout life, but its function in this cell type is unknown. Combining Wt1-knockout and inducible yeast artificial chromosome transgenic mouse models, we demonstrate that reduced expression levels of WT1 result in either crescentic glomerulonephritis or mesangial sclerosis depending on the gene dosage. Strikingly, the two podocyte-specific genes nphs1 and podocalyxin are dramatically downregulated in mice with decreased levels of Wt1, suggesting that these two genes act downstream of Wt1. Taken together, our data provide genetic evidence that reduced levels of Wt1 are responsible for the pathogenesis of two distinct renal diseases and offer a molecular explanation for the increased occurrence of glomerulosclerosis in patients with WAGR syndrome.
Hum Mol Genet 2002 Mar 15
PMID:WT1 is a key regulator of podocyte function: reduced expression levels cause crescentic glomerulonephritis and mesangial sclerosis. 1191 80

The cortical remodelling was studied when chronically nitric oxide synthesis (NOs) blockade (L-NAME-induced) hypertensive rats are simultaneously treated, or not, with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or calcium channel blocker. Four groups of eight rats each were studied as follows: Control (C), L-NAME (L), L-NAME+Enalapril (L+E) and L-NAME+Verapamil (L+V). The systolic blood pressure (SBP) was weekly recorded. The cortex of the left kidneys was analysed according to the vertical section design. The volume-weighted mean glomerular volume (VWGV) was made through the "point-sampled intercepts" method. Enalapril and verapamil were efficient in reducing the SBP in rats submitted to NOs blockade. Glomeruli had considerable alterations in L group rats (glomerular hypertrophy or sclerosis) and tubular atrophy. The VWGV was 100% greater in L group rats than in the C group rats, while it was 30% smaller in L+E and L+V groups than in L group. The tubular volume was 30-50% greater, while the tubular length was 20-30% smaller in the L group than in the other groups. The renal cortical region showed glomerular sclerosis/hypertrophy and tubular remodelling in rats with NOs blockade that was efficiently prevented with the simultaneous treatment with enalapril or verapamil.
J Cell Mol Med
PMID:Renal cortical remodelling by NO-synthesis blockers in rats is prevented by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and calcium channel blocker. 1206 86

Denys-Drash syndrome (DDS) is caused by dominant mutations of the Wilms' tumour suppressor gene, WT1, and characterized by a nephropathy involving diffuse mesangial sclerosis, male pseudohermaphroditism and/or Wilms' tumourigenesis. Previously, we reported that heterozygosity for the Wt1tmT396 mutation induces DDS in heterozygous and chimeric (Wt1tmT396/+<-->+/+) mice. In the present study, the fate of Wt1 mutant cells in chimeric kidneys was assessed by in situ marker analysis, and immunocytochemistry was used to re-examine the claim that glomerulosclerosis (GS) is caused by loss of WT1 and persistent Pax-2 expression by podocytes. Wt1 mutant cells colonized glomeruli efficiently, including podocytes, but some sclerotic glomeruli contained no detectable Wt1 mutant cells. The development of GS was preceded by widespread loss of ZO-1 signal in podocytes (even in kidneys where <5% of glomeruli contained Wt1 mutant podocytes), increased intra-renal renin expression, and de novo podocyte TGF-beta1 expression, but not podocyte Pax-2 expression or loss of WT1, synaptopodin, alpha-actinin-4 or nephrin expression. However, podocytes in partially sclerotic glomeruli that still expressed WT1 at high levels showed reduced vimentin expression, cell cycle re-entry, and re-expressed desmin, cytokeratin and Pax-2. The results suggest that: (i) GS is not due to loss of WT1 expression by podocytes; (ii) podocyte Pax-2 expression reflects re-expression rather than persistent expression, and is the consequence of GS; (iii) GS is mediated systemically and the mechanism involves activation of the renin-angiotensin system; and (iv) podocytes undergo typical maturational changes but subsequently de-differentiate and revert to an immature phenotype during disease progression.
Hum Mol Genet 2003 Sep 15
PMID:Murine Denys-Drash syndrome: evidence of podocyte de-differentiation and systemic mediation of glomerulosclerosis. 1291 83

Podocytes are specialized epithelial cells covering the basement membrane of the glomerulus in the kidney. The molecular mechanisms underlying the role of podocytes in glomerular filtration are still largely unknown. We generated podocin-deficient (Nphs2-/-) mice to investigate the function of podocin, a protein expressed at the insertion of the slit diaphragm in podocytes and defective in a subset of patients with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome and focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis. Nphs2-/- mice developed proteinuria during the antenatal period and died a few days after birth from renal failure caused by massive mesangial sclerosis. Electron microscopy revealed the extensive fusion of podocyte foot processes and the lack of a slit diaphragm in the remaining foot process junctions. Using real-time PCR and immunolabeling, we showed that the expression of other slit diaphragm components was modified in Nphs2-/- kidneys: the expression of the nephrin gene was downregulated, whereas that of the ZO1 and CD2AP genes appeared to be upregulated. Interestingly, the progression of the renal disease, as well as the presence or absence of renal vascular lesions, depends on the genetic background. Our data demonstrate the crucial role of podocin in the establishment of the glomerular filtration barrier and provide a suitable model for mapping and identifying modifier genes involved in glomerular diseases caused by podocyte injuries.
Mol Cell Biol 2004 Jan
PMID:Early glomerular filtration defect and severe renal disease in podocin-deficient mice. 1470 29

Retinoids, derivatives of vitamin A, inhibit mesangial cell proliferation, glomerular inflammation, and extracellular matrix deposition in acute anti-Thy1.1 glomerulonephritis (Thy-GN) of the rat. We examined a model, chronic mesangioproliferative Thy-GN (MoAb 1-22-3), which is more akin to human disease. Treatment started on day 23 when Thy-GN had already been established. Nonnephritic control and Thy-GN rats were treated orally for 67 days with vehicle or with two doses of either the retinoic acid receptor alpha-specific agonist AGN 195183 (RARalpha agonist) or the retinoid X receptor specific agonist AGN 194204 (RXR agonist). Doses of either the RARalpha or the RXR agonist significantly reduced albuminuria and normalized blood pressure during the course of treatment. The glomerulosclerosis index, glomerular cell and interstitial cell counts, and area of the interstitial space were significantly lower in nephritic rats treated with the RARalpha agonist or RXR agonist than with vehicle. The RARalpha and RXR agonist significantly reduced the infiltration of the glomerulus by macrophages. The increase in glomerular TGFbeta1 and prepro-ET(1) gene expression in vehicle-treated nephritic rats was significantly attenuated by RARalpha or RXR agonists. Glomerular expression of RXRalpha and RARalpha receptor mRNA was significantly greater in vehicle-treated nephritic rats than in nonnephritic controls. Treatment with RARalpha or RXR agonists tended to normalize retinoid-receptor gene expression. Our data indicate that both RARalpha agonists and RXR agonists reduce renal damage in rats with established chronic glomerulonephritis. Receptor-specific retinoids may provide a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of chronic glomerulonephritis.
J Mol Med (Berl) 2004 Feb
PMID:Retinoic acid receptor alpha and retinoid X receptor specific agonists reduce renal injury in established chronic glomerulonephritis of the rat. 1471 50

Diabetic nephropathy is related to glomerular extracellular matrix (ECM) accumulation that leads to glomerulosclerosis. Fluvastatin as a lipid-lowering medicine significantly prevents diabetic nephropathy, probably not only through its lipid-lowering action, but also mainly through its direct suppression of glomerular ECM accumulation. To test this hypothesis, in the present study, a five-sixths nephrectomized (5/6Nx) rat model to induce a renal ECM accumulation without coexistence of hyperlipidemia was used to investigate the effect of fluvastatin on renal function, glomerular ECM accumulation and expression of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF). 5/6Nx induced a significant nephropathy in rats at 13 weeks, indicated by renal dysfunction including increases in blood urine nitrogen, creatinine and urinary protein excretion, and renal histopathological changes. Administration of fluvastatin significantly prevented the renal dysfunction and histological abnormalities in the 5/6Nx rats. Furthermore, both significant suppression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) activity such as MMP-2 and significant activation of tissue inhibitors of MMP (TIMPs) such as TIMP-2 observed in the 5/6Nx rats were almost completely prevented by fluvastatin, resulting in a significant prevention of glomerular ECM accumulation. For upstream mediator of ECM accumulation, 5/6Nx significantly up-regulated CTGF mRNA expression, but fluvastatin treatment prevented CTGF up-regulation. These results suggest that fluvastatin, as one of well-known lipid-lowering agents, plays an important role in the prevention of nephropathy, likely through suppression of CTGF-mediated ECM accumulation. Therefore, fluvastatin may be a potential candidate for developing a pharmaceutical approach to the prevention of diabetic nephropathy due to its both lipid-lowering and direct anti-renal ECM accumulation actions.
Exp Mol Pathol 2004 Feb
PMID:Fluvastatin prevents nephropathy likely through suppression of connective tissue growth factor-mediated extracellular matrix accumulation. 1473 71

The diabetic epidemic that is being experienced around the world has many ramifications. Since diabetes is the most common cause of end stage renal disease in the United States and the Western world, we can expect the increase in prevalence to continue. Minority individuals with diabetes suffer a disproportionately high incidence of diabetic nephropathy leading to end stage renal disease. The data suggest that aggressive medical management should be their mainstay of therapy. In the past five years, our knowledge of the mechanisms involved in the pathology of diabetic glomerulosclerosis has greatly expanded. Transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta still maintains a key role in the pathogenesis. However, many of the signaling mechanisms have now been described. Furthermore, TGF-beta may also function to damage glomerular epithelial cells or podocytes, resulting in podocyteuria and proteinuria that worsen with progressive diabetic nephropathy. Additionally, TGF-beta upregulation in diabetes may cause injury or transformation of tubular epithelial cells that contribute to interstitial fibrosis. The use of thiazolidinediones in type 2 diabetes is associated with improvement in insulin sensitivity, as well as improvement in albuminuria. The mechanisms by which these ligands function remain unclear, but there may be several targets that could include mesangial cells and podocytes.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand) 2003 Dec
PMID:Advances in pathogenetic mechanisms of diabetic nephropathy. 1498 4

The kidney NO synthase is one of the most important renal controlling systems. This paper aims the quantification of renal cortical components involved in blood pressure regulation under NOs blockade. Spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHRs) are submitted to chronic blockade of NOs by L-nitro-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME) and an ACE inhibitor (enalapril) in comparison with the normotensive Wistar rats. Twenty SHRs and 5 Wistar rats were divided in 5 groups and observed for 21 days for blood pressure (BP) and serum creatinine: control Wistar (5) (C-W), control SHR (5) (C-SHR), L-SHR (5)--received L-NAME 30 mg/kg/day, L+E-SHR (5)--received L-NAME and Enalapril maleate 15 mg/kg/day, E-SHR (5)--received Enalapril maleate. A quantitative morphometric study (glomerular density, QA[gl], interstitium volume density, Vv[i], tubular surface and length densities, Sv[t] and Lv[t]) were performed at the end. The BP reached 226+/-15 mmHg in L-SHR group. The BP difference between the L-SHR and the C-SHR groups was significant from the first week while the E-SHR group became significant from the second week. At the end of the experiment the BP of the E-SHR group was similar to the BP in the C-W group. The QA[gl] was similar among C-SHR, L-SHR and L+E-SHR groups and no difference was found between E-SHR and C-W groups. In the L-SHRs serum creatinine was greatly increased, and microscopy showed thickening of arteriolar tunica media with an increase of the wall-to-lumen ratio, perivascular fibrosis, inflammatory infiltrated, tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. The use of enalapril was not completely efficient in reducing BP and morphological injury when the hypertension of SHRs was increased with the NOs blockade suggesting that NO deficiency-induced hypertension is not entirely mediated by the RAAS.
J Cell Mol Med
PMID:Renal cortex remodeling in nitric oxide deficient rats treated with enalapril. 1509 Feb 65

Diabetic nephropathy is characterized by an early period of renal growth with glomerular and tubular cell hypertrophy, but this is followed by progressive glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial fibrosis, associated with loss of renal tissue. We studied whether apoptotic cell death occurs in human diabetic nephropathy. Percutaneous renal biopsy samples were obtained from five patients with diabetic nephropathy who were receiving insulin and/or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy. Apoptosis was determined by the presence of DNA fragmentation, detected by in situ TUNEL staining, and by characteristic features on electron microscopy, such as chromatin condensation. Apoptosis was present in all five biopsy specimens, either in epithelial cells of the proximal or distal tubules, or in endothelial cells or interstitial cells. No apoptosis was detected in cells of the glomeruli. The present study provides evidence for apoptosis in human diabetic kidney, and suggests a role for apoptosis in the gradual loss of renal mass.
Mol Cell Biochem 2004 Apr
PMID:Evidence of apoptosis in human diabetic kidney. 1512 9


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