4.6 Article

Expression profiles of podocytes exposed to high glucose reveal new insights into early diabetic glomerulopathy

Journal

LABORATORY INVESTIGATION
Volume 91, Issue 4, Pages 488-498

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/labinvest.2010.188

Keywords

diabetic glomerulopathy; expression profiles; nephropathy; podocytes

Funding

  1. NIH George M. O'Brien Center for Kidney Disease Research [P30-DK079333]
  2. NIH [DK081644]
  3. annual United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology (USCAP)
  4. International Podocyte Conference

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Podocyte injury has been suggested to have a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of diabetic glomerulopathy. To glean insights into molecular mechanisms underlying diabetic podocyte injury, we generated temporal global gene transcript profiles of podocytes exposed to high glucose for a time interval of 1 or 2 weeks using microarrays. A number of genes were altered at both 1 and 2 weeks of glucose exposure compared with controls grown under normal glucose. These included extracellular matrix modulators, cell cycle regulators, extracellular transduction signals and membrane transport proteins. Novel genes that were altered at both 1 and 2 weeks of high-glucose exposure included neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (LCN2 or NGAL, decreased by 3.2-fold at 1 week and by 7.2-fold at 2 weeks), endothelial lipase (EL, increased by 3.6-fold at 1 week and 3.9-fold at 2 week) and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 8 (UGT8, increased by 3.9-fold at 1 week and 5.0-fold at 2 weeks). To further validate these results, we used real-time PCR from independent podocyte cultures, immunohistochemistry in renal biopsies and immunoblotting on urine specimens from diabetic patients. A more detailed time course revealed changes in LCN2 and EL mRNA levels as early as 6 hours and in UGT8 mRNA level at 12 hours post high-glucose exposure. EL immunohistochemistry on human tissues showed markedly increased expression in glomeruli, and immunoblotting readily detected EL in a subset of urine samples from diabetic nephropathy patients. In addition to previously implicated roles of these genes in ischemic or oxidative stress, our results further support their importance in hyperglycemic podocyte stress and possibly diabetic glomerulopathy pathogenesis and diagnosis in humans. Laboratory Investigation (2011) 91, 488-498; doi:10.1038/labinvest.2010.188; published online 22 November 2010

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