PubMed ID:
24052633
Public Release Type:
Journal
Publication Year: 2013
Affiliation: Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2013020173
Authors:
Nishizono R,
Chowdhury M,
Wang F,
Yang Y,
Wang SQ,
Afshinnia F,
Wickman L,
Wiggins RC,
Kershaw D,
Gipson D,
Song P,
Rovin B,
Escobar GA,
Wiggins J,
Tanzer M,
Graham D,
Hawkins J
Studies:
Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network
Model systems demonstrate that progression to ESRD is driven by progressive podocyte depletion (the podocyte depletion hypothesis) and can be noninvasively monitored through measurement of urine pellet podocyte mRNAs. To test these concepts in humans, we analyzed urine pellet mRNAs from 358 adult and pediatric kidney clinic patients and 291 controls (n=1143 samples). Compared with controls, urine podocyte mRNAs increased 79-fold (P<0.001) in patients with biopsy-proven glomerular disease and a 50% decrease in kidney function or progression to ESRD. An independent cohort of patients with Alport syndrome had a 23-fold increase in urinary podocyte mRNAs (P<0.001 compared with controls). Urinary podocyte mRNAs increased during active disease but returned to baseline on disease remission. Furthermore, urine podocyte mRNAs increased in all categories of glomerular disease evaluated, but levels ranged from high to normal, consistent with individual patient variability in the risk for progression. In contrast, urine podocyte mRNAs did not increase in polycystic kidney disease. The association between proteinuria and podocyturia varied markedly by glomerular disease type: a high correlation in minimal-change disease and a low correlation in membranous nephropathy. These data support the podocyte depletion hypothesis as the mechanism driving progression in all human glomerular diseases, suggest that urine pellet podocyte mRNAs could be useful for monitoring risk for progression and response to treatment, and provide novel insights into glomerular disease pathophysiology.