Publication | Open Access
Renal Bone Morphogenetic Protein-7 Protects against Diabetic Nephropathy
162
Citations
20
References
2006
Year
Renal PathologyDiabetic MiceRenal InflammationInflammationGlomerulonephritisRenal FunctionKidney Tubule RemodelingChronic Kidney DiseaseDiabetic NephropathyRenal PathophysiologyCell BiologyUrologyRenal DiseaseDiabetesRenal Bmp-7Diabetic Kidney DiseaseEarly DropoutMedicineNephrologyKidney Research
Longstanding diabetes causes renal injury with early dropout of podocytes, albuminuria, glomerular and tubulointerstitial fibrosis, and progressive renal failure. The renal pathology seems to be driven, in part, by TGF-beta and is associated with a loss of renal bone morphogenic protein-7 (BMP-7) expression. Here, the hypothesis that maintenance of renal (especially podocyte) BMP-7 by transgenic expression reduces diabetic renal injury was tested. Diabetic mice that expressed the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase promoter-driven BMP-7 transgene and nondiabetic, transgenic mice as well as diabetic and nondiabetic wild-type controls were studied for up to 1 yr. Transgenic expression of BMP-7 in glomerular podocytes and proximal tubules prevents podocyte dropout and reductions in nephrin levels in diabetic mice. Maintenance of BMP-7 also reduces glomerular fibrosis and interstitial collagen accumulation as well as collagen I and fibronectin expression. Diabetic wild-type mice develop progressive albuminuria, which is substantially reduced in transgenic mice. These effects of the BMP-7 transgene occur without changing renal TGF-beta levels. It is concluded that maintenance of renal BMP-7 during the evolution of diabetic nephropathy reduces diabetic renal injury, especially podocyte dropout. The findings also establish a role for endogenous glomerular BMP-7 as an autocrine regulator of podocyte integrity in vivo.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1