Aims/hypothesis. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder associated with T-cell mediated injury to multiple endocrine tissues. T-cell infiltration of the juxtaglomerular apparatus could be associated with changes in local renin angiotensin system activity and, thus, with changes in the renal microenvironment. We examined the frequency of juxtaglomerular apparatus T-cell infiltration early in Type 1 diabetes and tested whether this is associated with renal structure and function. Methods. We classified 89 Type 1 diabetic patients by immunohistochemical analysis as either juxtaglomerular apparatus T-cell positive (n=37) or T-cell negative (n=38). Borderline cases (n=14) were not considered further.Results. T-cell positive patients had a shorter duration of diabetes (6.7±2.5 years) than T-cell negative patients (9.2±5.0 years, p=0.011) and lower albumin excretion rate, but they had a similar glomerular filtration rate and blood pressure. Renal biopsy morphometric analysis showed similar glomerular basement membrane width and mesangial fractional volume in these two groups. However, glomerular capillary surface density (p=0.0012) and filtration surface per glomerulus (p=0.0155) were greater in the T-cell positive patients. Conclusion/Interpretation. Increased filtration surface per glomerulus could be associated with glomerular filtration rate preservation in diabetes. Thus, juxtaglomerular apparatus immunologic injury in Type 1 diabetes patients could delay the clinical consequences of diabetic nephropathy. [Diabetologia (2004) Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA E-mail: mauer002@umn.edu Abbreviations: ECM, Extracellular matrix; RAS, renin-angiotensin-system; JGA, juxtaglomerular apparatus; NHDN, natural history of diabetic nephropathy; IP, immunoperoxidase; GV, mean glomerular volume; TGF-B, transforming growth factor-B; Vv(Mes/glom), mesangial fractional volume per glomerulus; GBM, glomerular basement membrane; Sv(PGBM/glom), surface density of the peripheral glomerular capillary perglomerulus ; TFS, total filtration surface per glomerulus; Vv(Int/cortex), fractional volume of renal cortical interstitium.
Caucasian type 2 diabetic patients with microalbuminuria (MA) or overt nephropathy (ON) show greater heterogeneity of renal lesions than type 1 diabetic patients. We examined whether a similar situation exists in 30 Japanese type 2 diabetic patients [21 male, age 48 ± (SD) 8 years, known duration 11 ± (SD) 8 years] without definable renal disease other than diabetic nephropathy. Six patients were normoalbuminuric (NA), 11 MA, and 13 had ON. Normal controls were 9 age-matched Japanese living-related renal transplant donors. Electron microscopic morphometry was performed on renal biopsy specimens and related to renal function. Glomerular basement membrane width and mesangial fractional volume [Vv(Mes/glom)] were increased in all type 2 diabetic patients groups (NA, MA, ON) as compared with normal controls. The Vv(Mes/glom) correlated directly with urinary albumin/creatinine. However, Vv(Mes/glom) as well as glomerular basement membrane width overlapped among the three functional categories (NA, MA, ON) and normal controls. In conclusion: (1) similar to Caucasian type 2 diabetic patients, Japanese type 2 diabetic patients have greater heterogeneity of renal structure than Caucasian type 1 diabetic patients, and (2) urinary albumin is not a reliable indicator of underlying renal structure in Japanese type 2 diabetic patients.
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