Patients with albuminuria and CKD frequently have vascular dysfunction but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Because the endothelial surface layer, a meshwork of surface-bound and loosely adherent glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans, modulates vascular function, its loss could contribute to both renal and systemic vascular dysfunction in proteinuric CKD. Using Munich-Wistar-Fromter (MWF) rats as a model of spontaneous albuminuric CKD, multiphoton fluorescence imaging and single-vessel physiology measurements revealed that old MWF rats exhibited widespread loss of the endothelial surface layer in parallel with defects in microvascular permeability to both water and albumin, in both continuous mesenteric microvessels and fenestrated glomerular microvessels. In contrast to young MWF rats, enzymatic disruption of the endothelial surface layer in old MWF rats resulted in neither additional loss of the layer nor additional changes in permeability. Intravenous injection of wheat germ agglutinin lectin and its adsorption onto the endothelial surface layer significantly improved glomerular albumin permeability. Taken together, these results suggest that widespread loss of the endothelial surface layer links albuminuric kidney disease with systemic vascular dysfunction, providing a potential therapeutic target for proteinuric kidney disease.
Podocytes are critical in the maintenance of a healthy glomerular filter, however they have been difficult to study in the intact kidney due to technical limitations. Here we report the development of serial multiphoton microscopy (MPM) of the same glomeruli over several days to visualize the motility of podocytes and parietal epithelial cells (PEC) in vivo. In Podocin-GFP mice podocytes formed sporadic multi-cellular clusters after unilateral ureteral ligation (UUO) and migrated into the parietal Bowman’s capsule. The tracking of single cells in Podocin-confetti mice featuring cell-specific expression of CFP, GFP, YFP, or RFP revealed the simultaneous migration of multiple podocytes. In PEPCK-GFP mice serial MPM found PEC-to-podocyte migration and nanotubule connections. Our data support the highly dynamic rather than static nature of the glomerular environment and cellular composition. Future application of this new approach promises to advance our understanding of the mechanisms of glomerular injury and regeneration.
Patients and animals with renal injury exhibit increased urinary excretion of angiotensinogen. Although increased tubular synthesis of angiotensinogen contributes to the increased excretion, we do not know to what degree glomerular filtration of systemic angiotensinogen, especially through an abnormal glomerular filtration barrier, contributes to the increase in urinary levels. Here, we used multiphoton microscopy to visualize and quantify the glomerular permeability of angiotensinogen in the intact mouse and rat kidney. In healthy mice and Munich-Wistar-Frömter rats at the early stage of glomerulosclerosis, the glomerular sieving coefficient of systemically infused Atto565-labeled human angiotensinogen (Atto565-hAGT), which rodent renin cannot cleave, was only 25% of the glomerular sieving coefficient of albumin, and its urinary excretion was undetectable. In a more advanced phase of kidney disease, the glomerular permeability of Atto565-hAGT was slightly higher but still very low. Furthermore, unlike urinary albumin, the significantly higher urinary excretion of endogenous rat angiotensinogen did not correlate with either the Atto565-hAGT or Atto565-albumin glomerular sieving coefficients. These results strongly suggest that the vast majority of urinary angiotensinogen originates from the tubules rather than glomerular filtration. The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is one of the most important regulatory mechanisms of body fluid, electrolyte homeostasis, and BP. 1-4 RAS in the kidney is independently regulated from RAS in the systemic circulation, and it has been implicated in the development of hypertension and kidney diseases. For example, renal epithelial cellspecific overexpression of human angiotensinogen (AGT) in human renin transgenic mice resulted in increased renal angiotensin II, hypertension, and renal fibrosis without any changes in circulating angiotensin II. 5 Also, Dahl salt-sensitive rats, which show low plasma renin activity under high salt feeding, had higher renal angiotensin II content in the kidney compared with normal salt-fed control animals. 6 Although all components that are necessary for angiotensin II production are expressed in the kidney, 3 AGT is, currently, the only component that is noninvasively measurable in the urine of patients. The level of urinary AGT reflects the activity of the intrarenal RAS, and it is associated with pathologic states in several experimental 7,8 and clinical studies. 9,10 Although the major source of the circulating AGT is the liver, we and others have previously shown that AGT is produced in the proximal tubules through a de novo pathway. 3,11
signaling is a robust and key pathogenic mechanism in podocyte injury. This in vivo imaging approach will allow future detailed investigation of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of glomerular disease in the intact living kidney.
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