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"Kidney Diseases"
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Kidney and eye diseases: common risk factors, etiological mechanisms, and pathways
by
Sabanayagam, Charumathi
,
Wong, Chee Wai
,
Cheng, Ching-Yu
in
age-related macular degeneration
,
cataract
,
chronic kidney disease
2014
Chronic kidney disease is an emerging health problem worldwide. The eye shares striking structural, developmental, and genetic pathways with the kidney, suggesting that kidney disease and ocular disease may be closely linked. A growing number of studies have found associations of chronic kidney disease with age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma, and cataract. In addition, retinal microvascular parameters have been shown to be predictive of chronic kidney disease. Chronic kidney disease shares common vascular risk factors including diabetes, hypertension, smoking, and obesity, and pathogenetic mechanisms including inflammation, oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and microvascular dysfunction, with ocular diseases supporting the ‘Common Soil Hypothesis.’ In this review, we present major epidemiological evidence for these associations and explore underlying pathogenic mechanisms and common risk factors for kidney and ocular disease. Understanding the link between kidney and ocular disease can lead to the development of new treatment and screening strategies for both diseases.
Journal Article
Roles of Nrf2 in Protecting the Kidney from Oxidative Damage
2020
Over 10% of the global population suffers from kidney disease. However, only kidney replacement therapies, which burden medical expenses, are currently effective in treating kidney disease. Therefore, elucidating the complicated molecular pathology of kidney disease is an urgent priority for developing innovative therapeutics for kidney disease. Recent studies demonstrated that intertwined renal vasculature often causes ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), which generates oxidative stress, and that the accumulation of oxidative stress is a common pathway underlying various types of kidney disease. We reported that activating the antioxidative transcription factor Nrf2 in renal tubules in mice with renal IRI effectively mitigates tubular damage and interstitial fibrosis by inducing the expression of genes related to cytoprotection against oxidative stress. Additionally, since the kidney performs multiple functions beyond blood purification, renoprotection by Nrf2 activation is anticipated to lead to various benefits. Indeed, our experiments indicated the possibility that Nrf2 activation mitigates anemia, which is caused by impaired production of the erythroid growth factor erythropoietin from injured kidneys, and moderates organ damage worsened by anemic hypoxia. Clinical trials investigating Nrf2-activating compounds in kidney disease patients are ongoing, and beneficial effects are being obtained. Thus, Nrf2 activators are expected to emerge as first-in-class innovative medicine for kidney disease treatment.
Journal Article
Chronic kidney disease
by
Levey, Andrew S
,
Coresh, Josef
in
Aging - physiology
,
albuminuria
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Chronic kidney disease is a general term for heterogeneous disorders affecting kidney structure and function. The 2002 guidelines for definition and classification of this disease represented an important shift towards its recognition as a worldwide public health problem that should be managed in its early stages by general internists. Disease and management are classified according to stages of disease severity, which are assessed from glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and albuminuria, and clinical diagnosis (cause and pathology). Chronic kidney disease can be detected with routine laboratory tests, and some treatments can prevent development and slow disease progression, reduce complications of decreased GFR and risk of cardiovascular disease, and improve survival and quality of life. In this Seminar we discuss disease burden, recommendations for assessment and management, and future challenges. We emphasise clinical practice guidelines, clinical trials, and areas of uncertainty.
Journal Article
Hypertension and kidneys: unraveling complex molecular mechanisms underlying hypertensive renal damage
2014
Kidney damage represents a frequent event in the course of hypertension, ranging from a benign to a malignant form of nephropathy depending on several factors, that is, individual susceptibility, degree of hypertension, type of etiology and underlying kidney disease. Multiple mechanisms are involved in determination of kidney glomerular, tubular and interstitial injuries in hypertension. The present review article discusses relevant contributory molecular mechanisms underpinning the promotion of hypertensive renal damage, such as the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS), oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and genetic and epigenetic determinants. We highlighted major pathways involved in the progression of inflammation and fibrosis leading to glomerular sclerosis, tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis, thus providing a state of the art review of the pathogenetic background useful for a better understanding of current and future therapeutic strategies toward hypertensive nephropathy. An adequate control of high blood pressure, obtained through an appropriate therapeutic intervention, still represents the key strategy to achieve a satisfactory control of renal damage in hypertension. In this regard, we reviewed the impact of currently available antihypertensive pharmacological treatment on kidney damage, with particular regard to RAAS inhibitors. Notably, recent findings underscored the ability of the kidneys to regenerate and to repair tissue injuries through the differentiation of resident embryonic stem cells. Pharmacological modulation of the renal endogenous reparative process (that is, with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and AT1 angiotensin II receptor blockers), as well as future therapeutic strategies targeted to the renopoietic system, offers interesting perspectives for the management of hypertensive nephropathy.
Journal Article
Epidemiology of chronic kidney disease in children
by
Harambat, Jérôme
,
Tizard, E. Jane
,
van Stralen, Karlijn J.
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Cable television broadcasting industry
2012
In the past 30 years there have been major improvements in the care of children with chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, most of the available epidemiological data stem from end-stage renal disease (ESRD) registries and information on the earlier stages of pediatric CKD is still limited. The median reported incidence of renal replacement therapy (RRT) in children aged 0–19 years across the world in 2008 was 9 per million of the age-related population (4–18 years). The prevalence of RRT in 2008 ranged from 18 to 100 per million of the age-related population. Congenital disorders, including congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) and hereditary nephropathies, are responsible for about two thirds of all cases of CKD in developed countries, while acquired causes predominate in developing countries. Children with congenital disorders experience a slower progression of CKD than those with glomerulonephritis, resulting in a lower proportion of CAKUT in the ESRD population compared with less advanced stages of CKD. Most children with ESRD start on dialysis and then receive a transplant. While the survival rate of children with ERSD has improved, it remains about 30 times lower than that of healthy peers. Children now mainly die of cardiovascular causes and infection rather than from renal failure.
Journal Article
A single-nucleus RNA-sequencing pipeline to decipher the molecular anatomy and pathophysiology of human kidneys
2019
Defining cellular and molecular identities within the kidney is necessary to understand its organization and function in health and disease. Here we demonstrate a reproducible method with minimal artifacts for single-nucleus Droplet-based RNA sequencing (snDrop-Seq) that we use to resolve thirty distinct cell populations in human adult kidney. We define molecular transition states along more than ten nephron segments spanning two major kidney regions. We further delineate cell type-specific expression of genes associated with chronic kidney disease, diabetes and hypertension, providing insight into possible targeted therapies. This includes expression of a hypertension-associated mechano-sensory ion channel in mesangial cells, and identification of proximal tubule cell populations defined by pathogenic expression signatures. Our fully optimized, quality-controlled transcriptomic profiling pipeline constitutes a tool for the generation of healthy and diseased molecular atlases applicable to clinical samples.
Single-cell studies in solid tissues remain challenging and have benefited from the development of single-nuclei RNA sequencing strategies. Here Lake et al. apply single-nucleus RNA sequencing to human kidney tissues to provide a comprehensive molecular and cellular atlas of the human kidney, with potential implications for the understanding of kidney physiology and disease.
Journal Article
The HNF1B score is a simple tool to select patients for HNF1B gene analysis
by
Faguer, Stanislas
,
Chauveau, Dominique
,
Huart, Antoine
in
Area Under Curve
,
Biomarkers - blood
,
Blood Chemical Analysis
2014
HNF1B-related disease is an emerging condition characterized by an autosomal-dominant inheritance, a 50% rate of de novo mutations, and a highly variable phenotype (renal involvement, maturity-onset diabetes of the young type 5, pancreatic hypoplasia, and urogenital tract and liver test abnormalities). Given the current lack of pathognomonic characteristics and the wide overlap with other conditions, a genetic test is the diagnostic gold standard. However, pre-genetic screening is mandatory because genetic testing has substantial costs. Our aim was to develop a HNF1B score, based on clinical, imaging, and biological variables, as a pivotal tool for rational genetic testing. A score was created using a weighted combination of the most discriminative characteristics based on the frequency and specificity in published series. The HNF1B score is calculated upon 17 items including antenatal discovery, family history, and organ involvement (kidney, pancreas, liver, and genital tract). The performance of the score was assessed by a ROC curve analysis in a 433-individual cohort containing 56 HNF1B cases. The HNF1B score efficiently and significantly discriminated between mutated and nonmutated cases (AUC 0.78). The optimal cutoff threshold for the negative predictive value to rule out HNF1B mutations in a suspected individual was 8 (sensitivity 98.2%, specificity 41.1%, and negative predictive value over 99%). Thus, the HNF1B score is a simple and accurate tool to provide a more rational approach to select patients for HNF1B screening.
Journal Article
Proximal tubule ATR regulates DNA repair to prevent maladaptive renal injury responses
2019
Maladaptive proximal tubule (PT) repair has been implicated in kidney fibrosis through induction of cell-cycle arrest at G2/M. We explored the relative importance of the PT DNA damage response (DDR) in kidney fibrosis by genetically inactivating ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR), which is a sensor and upstream initiator of the DDR. In human chronic kidney disease, ATR expression inversely correlates with DNA damage. ATR was upregulated in approximately 70% of Lotus tetragonolobus lectin-positive (LTL+) PT cells in cisplatin-exposed human kidney organoids. Inhibition of ATR resulted in greater PT cell injury in organoids and cultured PT cells. PT-specific Atr-knockout (ATRRPTC-/-) mice exhibited greater kidney function impairment, DNA damage, and fibrosis than did WT mice in response to kidney injury induced by either cisplatin, bilateral ischemia-reperfusion, or unilateral ureteral obstruction. ATRRPTC-/- mice had more cells in the G2/M phase after injury than did WT mice after similar treatments. In conclusion, PT ATR activation is a key component of the DDR, which confers a protective effect mitigating the maladaptive repair and consequent fibrosis that follow kidney injury.
Journal Article
Autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease: diagnosis, classification, and management—A KDIGO consensus report
by
Hosking, Andrew
,
Alper, Seth L.
,
Wolf, Matthias T.
in
Consensus
,
DNA Mutational Analysis
,
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
2015
Rare autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial kidney disease is caused by mutations in the genes encoding uromodulin (UMOD), hepatocyte nuclear factor-1β (HNF1B), renin (REN), and mucin-1 (MUC1). Multiple names have been proposed for these disorders, including ‘Medullary Cystic Kidney Disease (MCKD) type 2’, ‘Familial Juvenile Hyperuricemic Nephropathy (FJHN)’, or ‘Uromodulin-Associated Kidney Disease (UAKD)’ for UMOD-related diseases and ‘MCKD type 1’ for the disease caused by MUC1 mutations. The multiplicity of these terms, and the fact that cysts are not pathognomonic, creates confusion. Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) proposes adoption of a new terminology for this group of diseases using the term ‘Autosomal Dominant Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease’ (ADTKD) appended by a gene-based subclassification, and suggests diagnostic criteria. Implementation of these recommendations is anticipated to facilitate recognition and characterization of these monogenic diseases. A better understanding of these rare disorders may be relevant for the tubulointerstitial fibrosis component in many forms of chronic kidney disease.
Journal Article
Sirtuin and metabolic kidney disease
by
Itoh, Hiroshi
,
Wakino, Shu
,
Hasegawa, Kazuhiro
in
Animals
,
cell signaling
,
chronic kidney disease
2015
Sirtuin is a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide–dependent deacetylase. One of its isoforms, Sirt1, is a key molecule in glucose, lipid, and energy metabolism. The renal protective effects of Sirt1 are found in various models of renal disorders with metabolic impairment, such as diabetic nephropathy. Protective effects include the maintenance of glomerular barrier function, anti–fibrosis effects, anti–oxidative stress effects, and regulation of mitochondria function and energy metabolism. Various target molecules subject to direct deacetylation or epigenetic gene regulation have been identified as effectors of the renal protective function of sirtuin. Recently, it was demonstrated that Sirt1 expression decreases in proximal tubules before albuminuria in a mouse model of diabetic nephropathy, and that albuminuria is suppressed in proximal tubule–specific mice overexpressing Sirt1. These findings suggest that decreased Sirt1 expression in proximal tubular cells causes abnormal nicotine metabolism and reduces the supply of nicotinamide mononucleotide from renal tubules to glomeruli. This further decreases expression of Sirt1 in glomerular podocytes and increases expression of a tight junction protein, claudin-1, which results in albuminuria. Activators of the sirtuin family of proteins, including resveratrol, may be important in the development of new therapeutic strategies for treating metabolic kidney diseases, including diabetic nephropathy.
Journal Article