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Hypertension induces glomerulosclerosis in phospholipase C-ε1 deficiency.

Citation
Atchison, D. K., et al. “Hypertension Induces Glomerulosclerosis In Phospholipase C-Ε1 Deficiency.”. American Journal Of Physiology. Renal Physiology, pp. F1177-F1187.
Center University of Michigan
Author Douglas K Atchison, Christopher L O'Connor, Rajasree Menon, Edgar A Otto, Santhi K Ganesh, Roger C Wiggins, Alan Smrcka V, Markus Bitzer
Keywords diffuse mesangial sclerosis, glomerulosclerosis, hypertension, phospholipase C-ε1
Abstract

Loss-of-function mutations in phospholipase C-ε1 (PLCE1) have been detected in patients with nephrotic syndrome, but other family members with the same mutation were asymptomatic, suggesting additional stressor are required to cause the full phenotype. Consistent with these observations, we determined that global -deficient mice have histologically normal glomeruli and no albuminuria at baseline. Angiotensin II (ANG II) is known to induce glomerular damage in genetically susceptible individuals. Therefore, we tested whether ANG II enhances glomerular damage in -deficient mice. ANG II increased blood pressure equally in -deficient and wild-type littermates. Additionally, it led to 20-fold increased albuminuria and significantly more sclerotic glomeruli in -deficient mice compared with wild-type littermates. Furthermore, deficient mice demonstrated diffuse mesangial expansion, podocyte loss, and focal podocyte foot process effacement. To determine whether these effects are mediated by hypertension and hyperfiltration, rather than directly through ANG II, we raised blood pressure to a similar level using DOCA + salt + uninephrectomy and norepinephrine. This caused a fivefold increase in albuminuria in -deficient mice and a significant increase in the number of sclerotic glomeruli. Consistent with previous findings in mice, we detected strong transcript expression in podocytes using single cell sequencing of human kidney tissue. In hemagglutinin-tagged transgenic mice, Plce1 was detected in podocytes and also in glomerular arterioles using immunohistochemistry. Our data demonstrate that deficiency in mice predisposes to glomerular damage secondary to hypertensive insults.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology
Volume
318
Issue
5
Number of Pages
F1177-F1187
Date Published
05/2020
ISSN Number
1522-1466
DOI
10.1152/ajprenal.00541.2019
Alternate Journal
Am. J. Physiol. Renal Physiol.
PMID
32223311
PMCID
PMC7294338
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