4.7 Article

A susceptibility gene for kidney disease in an obese mouse model of type II diabetes maps to chromosome 8

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 78, Issue 5, Pages 453-462

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/ki.2010.160

Keywords

diabetic glomerulopathy; diabetic nephropathy; genetic renal disease

Funding

  1. Columbia University Diabetes and Endocrinology Center [NIH P30-DK63608]
  2. AECOM Diabetes Research and Training Center [P60 DK20541]
  3. New York Obesity Research Center [PO1DK26687]

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Most mouse models of diabetes do not fully reproduce features of human diabetic nephropathy, limiting their utility in inferring mechanisms of human disease. Here we performed detailed phenotypic and genetic characterization of leptin-receptor (Lepr) deficient mice on the FVB/NJ background (FVBdb/db), an obese model of type II diabetes, to determine their suitability to model human diabetic nephropathy. These mice have sustained hyperglycemia, significant albuminuria and characteristic diabetic renal findings including mesangial sclerosis and nodular glomerulosclerosis after 6 months of age. In contrast, equally obese, hyperglycemic Lepr/Sur1 deficient C57BL/6J (Sur1 has defective insulin secretion) mice have minimal evidence of nephropathy. A genome-wide scan in 165 Lepr deficient backcross progeny derived from FVB/NJ and C57BL/6J identified a major locus influencing nephropathy and albuminuria on chromosome 8B1-C5 (Dbnph1 locus, peak lod score 5.0). This locus was distinct from those contrasting susceptibility to beta cell hypertrophy and HIV-nephropathy between the same parental strains, indicating specificity to diabetic kidney disease. Genome-wide expression profiling showed that high and low risk Dbnph1 genotypes were associated with significant enrichment for oxidative phosphorylation and lipid clearance, respectively; molecular pathways shared with human diabetic nephropathy. Hence, we found that the FVBdb/db mouse recapitulates many clinical, histopathological and molecular features of human diabetic nephropathy. Identifying underlying susceptibility gene(s) and downstream dysregulated pathways in these mice may provide insight into the disease pathogenesis in humans. Kidney International (2010) 78, 453-462; doi:10.1038/ki.2010.160; published online 2 June 2010

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