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A signature of circulating inflammatory proteins and development of end-stage renal disease in diabetes.

Citation
Niewczas, M. A., et al. “A Signature Of Circulating Inflammatory Proteins And Development Of End-Stage Renal Disease In Diabetes.”. Nature Medicine, pp. 805-813.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
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Author Monika A Niewczas, Meda E Pavkov, Jan Skupien, Adam Smiles, Zaipul I Md Dom, Jonathan M Wilson, Jihwan Park, Viji Nair, Andrew Schlafly, Pierre-Jean Saulnier, Eiichiro Satake, Christopher A Simeone, Hetal Shah, Chengxiang Qiu, Helen C Looker, Paolo Fiorina, Carl F Ware, Jennifer K Sun, Alessandro Doria, Matthias Kretzler, Katalin Susztak, Kevin L Duffin, Robert G Nelson, Andrzej S Krolewski
Abstract

Chronic inflammation is postulated to be involved in the development of end-stage renal disease in diabetes, but which specific circulating inflammatory proteins contribute to this risk remain unknown. To study this, we examined 194 circulating inflammatory proteins in subjects from three independent cohorts with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. In each cohort, we identified an extremely robust kidney risk inflammatory signature (KRIS), consisting of 17 proteins enriched in tumor necrosis factor-receptor superfamily members, that was associated with a 10-year risk of end-stage renal disease. All these proteins had a systemic, non-kidney source. Our prospective study findings provide strong evidence that KRIS proteins contribute to the inflammatory process underlying end-stage renal disease development in both types of diabetes. These proteins point to new therapeutic targets and new prognostic tests to identify subjects at risk of end-stage renal disease, as well as biomarkers to measure responses to treatment of diabetic kidney disease.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Nature medicine
Volume
25
Issue
5
Number of Pages
805-813
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1546-170X
DOI
10.1038/s41591-019-0415-5
Alternate Journal
Nat. Med.
PMID
31011203
PMCID
PMC6508971
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