Glomerular podocyte differentiation state is critical for filtration barrier function and is regulated by WT1, a zinc finger transcription factor. A yeast two-hybrid assay identified a novel, WT1-interacting protein (WTIP) that maps to human chromosome 19q13.1, a region with genes linked to familial focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. The domain structure of WTIP is similar to the zyxin subfamily of cytosolic LIM domain-containing proteins, which contain three carboxyl-terminal LIM protein-protein interaction domains and a proline-rich, pre-LIM region with a nuclear export signal. Other LIM domain-containing proteins (zyxin and mouse muscle LIM protein) did not interact with WT1 in two-hybrid assays, and WTIP did not interact with an unrelated transcription factor, LMX1B. WTIP mRNA was detected in cultured podocytes and was developmentally regulated, with expression peaking in mouse kidney at embryonic day 15-16 (E15-E16) in kidney but persisting into adulthood. In situ hybridization demonstrated WTIP expression in developing E15 glomeruli and in cultured podocytes. The partial WTIP clone, which interacted with WTIP in the two-hybrid assay, co-localized with WT1 in nuclei, co-precipitated with WT1, and inhibited WT1-dependent transcriptional activation of the amphiregulin promoter. In contrast, full-length WTIP was excluded from cell nuclei, but after the addition of leptomycin B, an inhibitor of Crm1-mediated nuclear export, it accumulated in the nucleus and co-precipitated with WT1 in whole cell lysates. Epitope-tagged WTIP co-localized with the adaptor protein CD2AP (CMS) in podocyte actin spots and with Mena at cell-cell junctions. We propose that WTIP monitors slit diaphragm protein assembly as part of a multiple protein complex, linking this specialized adhesion junction to the actin cytoskeleton, and shuttles into the nucleus after podocyte injury, providing a mechanism whereby changes in slit diaphragm structure modulate gene expression.Podocytes are highly specialized epithelial cells, which synthesize components of glomerular basement membrane, elaborate interdigitating foot processes from adjacent cells that encircle capillaries and are bridged by extracellular proteins of the slit diaphragm. In proteinuric renal diseases, podocytes undergo stereotypic phenotypic simplification into a cuboidal shape, characterized by foot process fusion and retraction and loss of filtration barrier function. Although persistent podocyte dysregulation is associated with glomerular scarring, this phenotype switch is reversible. Appropriate therapy can restore normal podocyte structure and function, suggesting a dynamic, regulated process. Positional cloning and gene targeting have identified the proteins critical for normal podocyte function. However, in the absence of mutations, molecular mechanisms that regulate podocyte phenotype remain unclear. Given its unique microenvironment with exposure to hemodynamic forces and high flow of ultrafiltrate, we speculated that podocytes express intracellular molecules that relay ...
Chronic renal disease initiation and progression remain incompletely understood. Genome-wide expression monitoring should clarify mechanisms that cause progressive renal disease by determining how clusters of genes coordinately change their activity. Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) is a technique of expression profiling, which permits simultaneous, comparative, and quantitative analysis of gene-specific, 9- to 13-bp sequence tags. Using SAGE, we have constructed a tag expression library from ROP-+/+ mouse kidney. Tag sequences were sorted by abundance, and identity was determined by sequence homology searching. Analyses of 3,868 tags yielded 1,453 unique kidney transcripts. Forty-two percent of these transcripts matched mRNA sequence entries with known function, 35% of the transcripts corresponded to expressed sequence tag (EST) entries or cloned genes, whose function has not been established, and 23% represented unidentified genes. Previously characterized transcripts were clustered into functional groups, and those encoding metabolic enzymes, plasma membrane proteins (transporters/receptors), and ribosomal proteins were most abundant (39, 14, and 12% of known transcripts, respectively). The most common, kidney-specific transcripts were kidney androgen-regulated protein (4% of all transcripts), sodium-phosphate cotransporter (0.3%), renal cytochrome P-450 (0.3%), parathyroid hormone receptor (0.1%), and kidney-specific cadherin (0.1%). Comprehensively characterizing and contrasting gene expression patterns in normal and diseased kidneys will provide an alternative strategy to identify candidate pathways, which regulate nephropathy susceptibility and progression, and novel targets for therapeutic intervention.
Chronic renal disease initiation and progression remain incompletely understood. Genomewide expression monitoring should clarify the mechanisms which cause progressive renal disease by determining how clusters of genes coordinately change their activity. Serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) is a technique of expression profiling which permits simultaneous and quantitative analysis of 9- to 13-bp sequence tags that correspond to unique mRNAs. Key principles of the technique are use of PCR in a manner to minimize distortion and serial concatenation of tags which facilitates sequencing and permits identification of many expressed genes in a single cDNA molecule. Tags are extracted from many concatenated sequences, counted using software, and identified by comparison with existing gene databases. In aggregate, gene expression profiles generated from a tag library comprise a transcriptome which represents a comprehensive and quantitative profile of genes expressed at the time of analysis. These global snapshots of gene expression patterns can better define basic cell biology and provide insights into disease pathogenesis by simultaneously determining the net consequences of gene-gene and gene-environment interactions on expression of thousands of genes. Rather than applying a priori assumptions (i.e., hypothesis testing), transcriptome analysis is hypothesis generating and requires no prior knowledge of gene expression. SAGE kidney transcriptomes, from normal animals and animals with progressive kidney disease, are being produced and can be analyzed for novel pathogenetic mechanisms. The use of SAGE and other genomic and proteomic tools should result in a better understanding of kidney disease pathogenesis and in identification of new therapeutic targets.
Os/+ mice with a superimposed lpr mutation displayed a more severe renal phenotype, rather than phenotype rescue, suggesting that Fas pathway activation is necessary to delete cells resulting from Os-dependent injury. We further propose that an Os-lpr gene interaction and/or mixed ROP-C3H genetic background regulated the renal phenotype, consistent with the concept that chronic renal disease pathogenesis reflects effects of multiple nephropathy susceptibility alleles.
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