170 results on '"Barasch J"'
Search Results
2. Cryo-EM structure of LRP2 at pH 7.5
- Author
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Beenken, A., primary, Cerutti, G., additional, Brasch, J., additional, Fitzpatrick, A.W., additional, Barasch, J., additional, and Shapiro, L., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Biomarkers in acute kidney injury – pathophysiological basis and clinical performance
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Schrezenmeier, E. V., Barasch, J., Budde, K., Westhoff, T., and SchmidtOtt, K. M.
- Published
- 2017
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4. Transcription factor Cp2L1 controls cell fate decisions in the collecting duct: SW03.S12–34
- Author
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Werth, M., Schmidt-Ott, K., Leete, T., Qiu, A., and Barasch, J.
- Published
- 2013
5. Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin: pathophysiology and clinical applications
- Author
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Singer, E., Markó, L., Paragas, N., Barasch, J., Dragun, D., Müller, D. N., Budde, K., and Schmidt-Ott, K. M.
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- 2013
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6. Urine NGAL and IL-18 are Predictive Biomarkers for Delayed Graft Function Following Kidney Transplantation
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Parikh, C.R., Jani, A., Mishra, J., Ma, Q., Kelly, C., Barasch, J., Edelstein, C.L., and Devarajan, P.
- Published
- 2006
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7. Author Correction: The copy number variation landscape of congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (Nature Genetics, (2019), 51, 1, (117-127), 10.1038/s41588-018-0281-y)
- Author
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Verbitsky, M., Westland, R., Perez, A., Kiryluk, K., Liu, Q., Krithivasan, P., Mitrotti, A., Fasel, D. A., Batourina, E., Sampson, M. G., Bodria, M., Werth, M., Kao, C., Martino, J., Capone, V. P., Vivante, A., Shril, S., Kil, B. H., Marasa, M., Zhang, J. Y., Y. -J., Na, Lim, T. Y., Ahram, D., Weng, P. L., Heinzen, E. L., Carrea, A., Piaggio, G., Gesualdo, L., Manca, V., Masnata, G., Gigante, M., Cusi, D., Izzi, C., Scolari, F., van Wijk, J. A. E., Saraga, M., Santoro, D., Conti, G., Zamboli, P., White, H., Drozdz, D., Zachwieja, K., Miklaszewska, M., Tkaczyk, M., Tomczyk, D., Krakowska, A., Sikora, P., Jarmolinski, T., Borszewska-Kornacka, M. K., Pawluch, R., Szczepanska, M., Adamczyk, P., Mizerska-Wasiak, M., Krzemien, G., Szmigielska, A., Zaniew, M., Dobson, M. G., Darlow, J. M., Puri, P., Barton, D. E., Furth, S. L., Warady, B. A., Gucev, Z., Lozanovski, V. J., Tasic, V., Pisani, I., Allegri, L., Rodas, L. M., Campistol, J. M., Jeanpierre, C., Alam, S., Casale, P., Wong, C. S., Lin, F., Miranda, D. M., Oliveira, E. A., Simoes-e-Silva, A. C., Barasch, J. M., Levy, B., Wu, N., Hildebrandt, F., Ghiggeri, G. M., Latos-Bielenska, A., Materna-Kiryluk, A., Zhang, F., Hakonarson, H., Papaioannou, V. E., Mendelsohn, C. L., Gharavi, A. G., and Sanna-Cherchi, S.
- Subjects
renal ,genetics ,cakut - Published
- 2019
8. Disposal of Iron by a Mutant form of Siderocalin NGAL
- Author
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Rupert, P.B., primary, Strong, R.K., additional, Barasch, J., additional, Hollman, M., additional, Deng, R., additional, Hod, E.A., additional, Abergel, R., additional, Allred, B., additional, Xu, K., additional, Darrah, S., additional, Tekabe, Y., additional, Perlstein, A., additional, Bruck, E., additional, Stauber, J., additional, Corbin, K., additional, Buchen, C., additional, Slavkovich, V., additional, Graziano, J., additional, Spitalnik, S., additional, and Qiu, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
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9. Biomarkers in acute kidney injury - pathophysiological basis and clinical performance
- Author
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Schrezenmeier, E. V., primary, Barasch, J., additional, Budde, K., additional, Westhoff, T., additional, and Schmidt-Ott, K. M., additional
- Published
- 2016
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10. Localization of a gene for nonsyndromic renal hypodysplasia to chromosome 1p32-33. Am J Hum Genet. 2007 Mar;80(3):539-49
- Author
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SANNA CHERCHI, S, Caridi, G, Weng, Pl, Dagnino, M, Seri, M, Konka, A, Somenzi, D, Carrea, A, Izzi, C, Casu, D, Allegri, L, SCHMIDT OTT KM, Barasch, J, Scolari, F, Ravazzolo, Roberto, Ghiggeri, Gm, and Gharavi, Ag
- Published
- 2007
11. Urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin identifies unilateral and bilateral urinary tract obstruction
- Author
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Sise, M. E., primary, Forster, C., additional, Singer, E., additional, Sola-Del Valle, D., additional, Hahn, B., additional, Schmidt-Ott, K. M., additional, Barasch, J., additional, and Nickolas, T. L., additional
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- 2011
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12. Protein-energy wasting, inflammation and oxidative stress in CKD 5D
- Author
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Rosales, L., primary, Vega, O., additional, Usvyat, L., additional, Thijssen, S., additional, Levin, N., additional, Kotanko, P., additional, Miyamoto, T., additional, Witasp, A., additional, Rashid Qureshi, A., additional, Heimburger, O., additional, Barany, P., additional, Nordfors, L., additional, Lindholm, B., additional, Stenvinkel, P., additional, Jesus Carrero, J., additional, Kalousova, M., additional, Benakova, H., additional, Kubena, A. A., additional, Dusilova-Sulkova, S., additional, Tesar, V., additional, Zima, T., additional, Lee, Y. J., additional, Kim, M. S., additional, Song, B. G., additional, Cho, S., additional, Kim, S. R., additional, Stockler-Pinto, M., additional, Lobo, J., additional, Moraes, C., additional, Barros, A., additional, Farage, N., additional, Boaventura, G., additional, Mafra, D., additional, Malm, O., additional, Matsuda, S., additional, Akaike, N., additional, Kajiwara, K., additional, Tovbin, D., additional, Kesari, S., additional, Sola-Del Valle, D., additional, Barasch, J., additional, Douvdevani, A., additional, Zlotnik, M., additional, Abd Elkadir, A., additional, Storch, S., additional, Sarikaya, M., additional, Sari, F., additional, Gunes, J., additional, Eren, M., additional, Cetinkaya, R., additional, Hwang, J.-C., additional, Ma, T.-L., additional, Wang, C.-T., additional, Ogawa, H., additional, Nagaya, T., additional, Ota, Y., additional, Sarai, M., additional, Oda, O., additional, Biavo, B., additional, Uezima, C., additional, Costa, M. E., additional, Barros, C., additional, Martins, J. P., additional, Ribeiro Jr, E., additional, Tzanno-Martins, C., additional, Honda, H., additional, Kimata, N., additional, Wakai, K., additional, Akizawa, T., additional, Droulias, J., additional, Filliponi, V., additional, Argyropoulos, C., additional, Fischer, R., additional, Papakonstantinou, C., additional, Papadopoulos, C., additional, Kouvelis, A., additional, Zervas, G., additional, Dampolia, E., additional, Zerefos, N., additional, Valis, D., additional, Sarcina, C., additional, Baragetti, I., additional, Uboldi, P., additional, Buzzi, L., additional, Garlaschelli, K., additional, Ferrario, F., additional, Terraneo, V., additional, Norata, G. D., additional, Catapano, A. L., additional, Pozzi, C., additional, Conti, G., additional, Santoro, D., additional, Caccamo, D., additional, Condello, S., additional, Pazzano, D., additional, Savica, V., additional, Jentile, R., additional, Fede, C., additional, Bellinghieri, G., additional, Zortcheva, R., additional, Ikonomov, V., additional, Galunska, B., additional, Paskalev, D., additional, Dobreva, D., additional, Ivanova, D., additional, Tsunoda, M., additional, Ikee, R., additional, Sasaki, N., additional, Sato, N., additional, Hashimoto, N., additional, Korol, L., additional, Dudar, I., additional, Migal, L., additional, Gonchar, Y., additional, Seleznova, I., additional, Ischenko, V., additional, Erkmen Uyar, M., additional, Tutal, E., additional, Bal, Z., additional, Ahmed, N., additional, Sezer, S., additional, Fedak, D., additional, Kuzniewski, M., additional, Pawlica, D., additional, Kusnierz-Cabala, B., additional, Solnica, B., additional, Drozdz, M., additional, Janda, K., additional, Sulowicz, W., additional, Kopec, J., additional, Banach, M., additional, and Leal, V., additional
- Published
- 2011
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13. Urinary NGAL is a useful clinical biomarker of HIV-associated nephropathy
- Author
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Sola-Del Valle, D. A., primary, Mohan, S., additional, Cheng, J.-T., additional, Paragas, N. A., additional, Sise, M. E., additional, D'Agati, V. D., additional, and Barasch, J., additional
- Published
- 2011
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14. Catechol, a Urinary Ngal Binding Siderophore
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Bao, G, primary, Barasch, J, additional, Clifton, M, additional, and Strong, RK, additional
- Published
- 2008
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15. INDUCTION OF NEPHRONS FROM RENAL PROGENITORS BY MULTIPLE SIGNALS
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Barasch, J, primary, Yang, J, additional, and Mori, K, additional
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- 2003
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16. Spatial and temporal expression of cell surface molecules during nephrogenesis
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Goldberg, M. R., primary, Barasch, J., additional, Shifteh, A., additional, D'Agati, V., additional, Oliver, J. A., additional, Hu, C., additional, and al-Awqati, Q., additional
- Published
- 1997
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17. A ureteric bud cell line induces nephrogenesis in two steps by two distinct signals
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Barasch, J., primary, Pressler, L., additional, Connor, J., additional, and Malik, A., additional
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- 1996
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18. Cystic fibrosis epithelial cells have a receptor for pathogenic bacteria on their apical surface.
- Author
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Imundo, L, primary, Barasch, J, additional, Prince, A, additional, and Al-Awqati, Q, additional
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- 1995
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19. WNT/beta-catenin signaling in nephron progenitors and their epithelial progeny.
- Author
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Schmidt-Ott KM, Barasch J, Schmidt-Ott, Kai M, and Barasch, Jonathan
- Abstract
WNT signaling is a fundamental molecular pathway in both embryogenesis and disease. Nephron development is dependent on WNT signaling. The nephron epithelia proximal to the collecting duct develop from progenitor cells in the metanephric mesenchyme. The process involves formation of proto-epithelial cell aggregates, conversion into epithelia, and proximal-distal patterning of the nephron. Two ligands from the WNT family, namely Wnt9b and Wnt4, are required for nephron differentiation. Recent studies have addressed the downstream targets of these WNT ligands and delineated the role of the canonical WNT signaling pathway. This pathway depends on the intracellular protein beta-catenin and the T cell-specific transcription factor/lymphoid enhancer factor-1 (TCF/Lef1) family of transcription factors. Selective beta-catenin signaling antagonism inhibits differentiation of metanephric mesenchymal progenitor cells, while forced activation triggers a stage progression towards proto-epithelial aggregates. Nonetheless, activation of the pathway is transient during epithelial differentiation and titration of pathway activity may be central for the proper coordination of differentiation and morphogenesis. We review current evidence on the WNT/beta-catenin/TCF/Lef1 signaling pathway in kidney epithelial development and discuss the potential implication of non-canonical WNT signaling and WNT-independent events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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20. Sensitivity and specificity of a single emergency department measurement of urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin for diagnosing acute kidney injury.
- Author
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Nickolas TL, O'Rourke MJ, Yang J, Sise ME, Canetta PA, Barasch N, Buchen C, Khan F, Mori K, Giglio J, Devarajan P, Barasch J, Nickolas, Thomas L, O'Rourke, Matthew J, Yang, Jun, Sise, Meghan E, Canetta, Pietro A, Barasch, Nicholas, Buchen, Charles, and Khan, Faris
- Abstract
Background: A single serum creatinine measurement cannot distinguish acute kidney injury from chronic kidney disease or prerenal azotemia.Objective: To test the sensitivity and specificity of a single measurement of urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) and other urinary proteins to detect acute kidney injury in a spectrum of patients.Design: Prospective cohort study.Setting: Emergency department of Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York.Participants: 635 patients admitted to the hospital with acute kidney injury, prerenal azotemia, chronic kidney disease, or normal kidney function.Measurements: Diagnosis of acute kidney injury was based on the RIFLE (risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage) criteria and assigned by researchers who were blinded to experimental measurements. Urinary NGAL was measured by immunoblot, N-acetyl-beta-d-glucosaminidase (NAG) by enzyme measurement, alpha1-microglobulin and alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein by immunonephelometry, and serum creatinine by Jaffe kinetic reaction. Experimental measurements were not available to treating physicians.Results: Patients with acute kidney injury had a significantly elevated mean urinary NGAL level compared with the other kidney function groups (416 microg/g creatinine [SD, 387]; P = 0.001). At a cutoff value of 130 microg/g creatinine, sensitivity and specificity of NGAL for detecting acute injury were 0.900 (95% CI, 0.73 to 0.98) and 0.995 (CI, 0.990 to 1.00), respectively, and positive and negative likelihood ratios were 181.5 (CI, 58.33 to 564.71) and 0.10 (CI, 0.03 to 0.29); these values were superior to those for NAG, alpha1-microglobulin, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, fractional excretion of sodium, and serum creatinine. In multiple logistic regression, urinary NGAL level was highly predictive of clinical outcomes, including nephrology consultation, dialysis, and admission to the intensive care unit (odds ratio, 24.71 [CI, 7.69 to 79.42]).Limitations: All patients came from a single center. Few kidney biopsies were performed.Conclusion: A single measurement of urinary NGAL helps to distinguish acute injury from normal function, prerenal azotemia, and chronic kidney disease and predicts poor inpatient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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21. Biomarkers in acute and chronic kidney disease.
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Nickolas TL, Barasch J, Devarajan P, Nickolas, Thomas L, Barasch, Jonathan, and Devarajan, Prasad
- Published
- 2008
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22. Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin-mediated iron traffic in kidney epithelia.
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Schmidt-Ott KM, Mori K, Kalandadze A, Li J, Paragas N, Nicholas T, Devarajan P, Barasch J, Schmidt-Ott, Kai M, Mori, Kiyoshi, Kalandadze, Avtandil, Li, Jau-Yi, Paragas, Neal, Nicholas, Thomas, Devarajan, Prasad, and Barasch, Jonathan
- Published
- 2006
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23. Genes and proteins involved in mesenchymal to epithelial transition.
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Barasch, Jonathan and Barasch, J
- Published
- 2001
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24. Defective acidification of intracellular organelles in cystic fibrosis.
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Barasch, J. and Kiss, B.
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- *
CYSTIC fibrosis - Abstract
Presents research that finds defective acidification in cystic fibrosis cells of the `trans'-Golgi/`trans'-Golgi network, and of prelysosomes and of endosomes as a result of diminished C1-conductance. Sialylation of proteins and lipids is reducedand ligand traffic altered.
- Published
- 1991
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25. Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associated Lipocalin: A Novel Early Urinary Biomarker for Cisplatin Nephrotoxicity
- Author
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Mishra, J., Mori, K., Ma, Q., Kelly, C., Barasch, J., and Devarajan, P.
- Abstract
Abstract Background: Cisplatin is one of the most widely used chemotherapeutic agents, but the risk of nephrotoxicity frequently hinders the use of higher doses to maximize its antineoplastic effects. The lack of early biomarkers has impaired our ability to initiate potential therapeutic or preventive interventions in cisplatin nephrotoxicity in a timely manner. In this study, we have explored the expression and urinary excretion of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) in a mouse model of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxic injury. Methods: Mice were subjected to intraperitoneal injections of 20 mg/kg (high dose) or 5 mg/kg (low dose) cisplatin. The expression of NGAL was measured in the kidney and urine by Western analysis and immunofluorescence, and compared to changes in serum creatinine and urinary N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase (NAG). Results: Cisplatin resulted in tubule cell necrosis and apoptosis following the high dose, but not the low dose. By Western analysis, NGAL protein was rapidly induced in the kidney within 3 h of high-dose cisplatin. By immunofluorescence, NGAL was induced predominantly in proximal tubule cells in a punctate cytoplasmic distribution, reminiscent of a secreted protein. NGAL was easily detected in the urine by Western analysis within 3 h of cisplatin administration in a dose- and duration-dependent manner. By comparison, changes in urinary NAG or serum creatinine were not evident until 96 h after cisplatin. Using defined concentrations of purified recombinant NGAL, urinary NGAL excretion following cisplatin administration was quantified to be in the 2080 ng/ml range. Conclusion: The results indicate that NGAL represents an early and quantitative urinary biomarker for cisplatin nephrotoxicity.Copyright © 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel- Published
- 2004
26. Thyrotropin induces the acidification of the secretory granules of parafollicular cells by increasing the chloride conductance of the granular membrane.
- Author
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Barasch, J, Gershon, M D, Nunez, E A, Tamir, H, and al-Awqati, Q
- Abstract
Secretory granules of sheep thyroid parafollicular cells contain serotonin, a serotonin-binding protein, and calcitonin. Parafollicular cells, isolated by affinity chromatography, were found to secrete serotonin when activated by thyrotropin (TSH) or elevated [Ca2+]e. TSH also induced a rise in [Ca2+]i. We studied the effect of these secretogogues on the pH difference (delta pH) across the membranes of the secretory granules of isolated parafollicular cells. The trapping of the weak bases, acridine orange or 3-(2,4 dinitro anilino)-3'-amino-N-methyl dipropylamine (DAMP), within the granules was used to evaluate delta pH. In contrast to lysosomes, which served as an internal control, the secretory granules of resting parafollicular cells displayed a limited and variable ability to trap either acridine orange or 3-(2,4 dinitro anilino)-3'-amino-N-methyl dipropylamine; however, when parafollicular cells were stimulated with TSH or elevated [Ca2+]e, the granules acidified. Weak base trapping was also used to evaluate the ATP-driven H+ translocation into isolated parafollicular granules. The isolated parafollicular granules did not acidify in response to addition of ATP unless their transmembrane potential was collapsed by the K+ ionophore, valinomycin. Secretory granules isolated from TSH-treated parafollicular cells had a high chloride conductance than did granules isolated similarly from untreated cells. Furthermore, ATP-driven H+ translocation into parafollicular granules isolated from TSH-stimulated parafollicular cells occurred even in the absence of valinomycin. These results demonstrate that secretogogues can regulate the internal pH of the serotonin-storing secretory granules of parafollicular cells by opening a chloride channel associated with the granule membrane. This is the first demonstration that the pH of secretory vesicles may be modified by altering the conductance of a counterion for the H+ translocating ATPase.
- Published
- 1988
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27. Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) as a biomarker for acute renal injury after cardiac surgery.
- Author
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Mishra J, Dent C, Tarabishi R, Mitsnefes MM, Ma Q, Kelly C, Ruff SM, Zahedi K, Shao M, Bean J, Mori K, Barasch J, Devarajan P, Mishra, Jaya, Dent, Catherine, Tarabishi, Ridwan, Mitsnefes, Mark M, Ma, Qing, Kelly, Caitlin, and Ruff, Stacey M
- Abstract
Background: The scarcity of early biomarkers for acute renal failure has hindered our ability to launch preventive and therapeutic measures for this disorder in a timely manner. We tested the hypothesis that neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) is an early biomarker for ischaemic renal injury after cardiopulmonary bypass.Methods: We studied 71 children undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. Serial urine and blood samples were analysed by western blots and ELISA for NGAL expression. The primary outcome measure was acute renal injury, defined as a 50% increase in serum creatinine from baseline.Findings: 20 children (28%) developed acute renal injury, but diagnosis with serum creatinine was only possible 1-3 days after cardiopulmonary bypass. By contrast, urine concentrations of NGAL rose from a mean of 1.6 microg/L (SE 0.3) at baseline to 147 microg/L (23) 2 h after cardiopulmonary bypass, and the amount in serum increased from a mean of 3.2 microg/L (SE 0.5) at baseline to 61 microg/L (10) 2 h after the procedure. Univariate analysis showed a significant correlation between acute renal injury and the following: urine and serum concentrations of NGAL at 2 h, and cardiopulmonary bypass time. By multivariate analysis, the amount of NGAL in urine at 2 h after cardiopulmonary bypass was the most powerful independent predictor of acute renal injury. For concentration in urine of NGAL at 2 h, the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve was 0.998, sensitivity was 1.00, and specificity was 0.98 for a cutoff value of 50 microg/L.Interpretation: Concentrations in urine and serum of NGAL represent sensitive, specific, and highly predictive early biomarkers for acute renal injury after cardiac surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
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28. Case 31-2007: a man with abdominal pain and elevated creatinine.
- Author
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Haas CS, Devarajan P, Parikh C, Barasch J, Kleeman FJ, Rabb H, and Colvin RB
- Published
- 2008
29. Expression and Distribution of MUC1 in the Developing and Adult Kidney.
- Author
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Manrique-Caballero CL, Barasch J, Zaidi SK, Bates CM, Ray EC, Kleyman TR, and Al-Bataineh MM
- Abstract
Mucin 1 (or MUC1) is a heterodimeric transmembrane glycoprotein expressed on the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells in several tissues including the kidney. Recent studies have revealed several novel roles for MUC1 in the kidney, potentially including bacterial infection, mineral balance, and genetic interstitial kidney disease, even though MUC1 levels are reduced not only in the kidney but in all tissues due to MUC1 mutations. A careful localization of MUC1 in discrete segments of the nephron is a first step in understanding the multiple functional roles of MUC1 in the kidney. Most published reports of MUC1 expression to date have been largely confined to cultured cells, tumor tissues, selective nephron segments of experimental rodents, and very few studies have been performed using human kidney tissues. Given the rising attention to the role of MUC1 in differing components of renal physiology, we carefully examined the kidney distribution of MUC1 in both human and mouse kidney sections using well-defined markers for different nephron segments or cell types. We further extended our investigation to include sections of early stages of mouse kidney development and upon injury in humans. We included staining for MUC1 in urothelial cells, the highly specialized epithelial cells lining the renal pelvis and bladder. These data implicate a role for MUC1 in antimicrobial defense. Our study provides the groundwork to test the physiological relevance of MUC1 in the urinary tract.
- Published
- 2024
30. Spns1 is an iron transporter essential for megalin-dependent endocytosis.
- Author
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Beenken A, Shen T, Jin G, Ghotra A, Xu K, Nesanir K, Sturley RE, Vijayakumar S, Khan A, Levitman A, Stauber J, Chavez EY, Robbins-Juarez SY, Hao L, Field TB, Erdjument-Bromage H, Neubert TA, Shapiro L, Qiu A, and Barasch J
- Subjects
- Animals, Lysosomes metabolism, Iron Overload metabolism, Iron Overload genetics, Mice, Phosphorylation, Anion Transport Proteins metabolism, Anion Transport Proteins genetics, Anion Transport Proteins deficiency, Endocytosis, Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2 metabolism, Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2 genetics, Mice, Knockout, Kidney Tubules, Proximal metabolism, Cation Transport Proteins metabolism, Cation Transport Proteins genetics, Cation Transport Proteins deficiency, Iron metabolism
- Abstract
Proximal tubule endocytosis is essential to produce protein-free urine as well as to regulate system-wide metabolic pathways, such as the activation of Vitamin D. We have determined that the proximal tubule expresses an endolysosomal membrane protein, protein spinster homolog1 (Spns1), which engenders a novel iron conductance that is indispensable during embryonic development. Conditional knockout of Spns1 with a novel Cre-LoxP construct specific to megalin-expressing cells led to the arrest of megalin receptor-mediated endocytosis as well as dextran pinocytosis in proximal tubules. The endocytic defect was accompanied by changes in megalin phosphorylation as well as enlargement of lysosomes, confirming previous findings in Drosophila and Zebrafish. The endocytic defect was also accompanied by iron overload in proximal tubules. Remarkably, iron levels regulated the Spns1 phenotypes because feeding an iron-deficient diet or mating Spns1 knockout with divalent metal transporter1 knockout rescued the phenotypes. Conversely, iron-loading wild-type mice reproduced the endocytic defect. These data demonstrate a reversible, negative feedback for apical endocytosis and raise the possibility that regulation of endocytosis, pinocytosis, megalin activation, and organellar size and function is nutrient-responsive. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Spns1 mediates a novel iron conductance essential during embryogenesis. Spns1 knockout leads to endocytic and lysosomal defects, accompanied by iron overload in the kidney. Reversal of iron overload by restricting dietary iron or by concurrent knockout of the iron transporter, DMT1 rescued the endocytic and organellar defects and reverted markers of iron overload. These data suggest feedback between iron and proximal tubule endocytosis.
- Published
- 2024
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31. Plasma proteomics of acute tubular injury.
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Schmidt IM, Surapaneni AL, Zhao R, Upadhyay D, Yeo WJ, Schlosser P, Huynh C, Srivastava A, Palsson R, Kim T, Stillman IE, Barwinska D, Barasch J, Eadon MT, El-Achkar TM, Henderson J, Moledina DG, Rosas SE, Claudel SE, Verma A, Wen Y, Lindenmayer M, Huber TB, Parikh SV, Shapiro JP, Rovin BH, Stanaway IB, Sathe NA, Bhatraju PK, Coresh J, Rhee EP, Grams ME, and Waikar SS
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Tenascin blood, Tenascin genetics, Tenascin metabolism, Kidney Tubules metabolism, Kidney Tubules pathology, Aged, Adult, SARS-CoV-2, Single-Cell Analysis, Blood Proteins metabolism, Acute Kidney Injury blood, Proteomics methods, Biomarkers blood, COVID-19 blood, Osteopontin blood
- Abstract
The kidney tubules constitute two-thirds of the cells of the kidney and account for the majority of the organ's metabolic energy expenditure. Acute tubular injury (ATI) is observed across various types of kidney diseases and may significantly contribute to progression to kidney failure. Non-invasive biomarkers of ATI may allow for early detection and drug development. Using the SomaScan proteomics platform on 434 patients with biopsy-confirmed kidney disease, we here identify plasma biomarkers associated with ATI severity. We employ regional transcriptomics and proteomics, single-cell RNA sequencing, and pathway analysis to explore biomarker protein and gene expression and enriched biological pathways. Additionally, we examine ATI biomarker associations with acute kidney injury (AKI) in the Kidney Precision Medicine Project (KPMP) (n = 44), the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study (n = 4610), and the COVID-19 Host Response and Clinical Outcomes (CHROME) study (n = 268). Our findings indicate 156 plasma proteins significantly linked to ATI with osteopontin, macrophage mannose receptor 1, and tenascin C showing the strongest associations. Pathway analysis highlight immune regulation and organelle stress responses in ATI pathogenesis., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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32. Epithelial cell states associated with kidney and allograft injury.
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Hinze C, Lovric S, Halloran PF, Barasch J, and Schmidt-Ott KM
- Subjects
- Humans, Graft Rejection etiology, Kidney pathology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic etiology, Transcriptome, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Epithelial Cells, Acute Kidney Injury etiology, Allografts
- Abstract
The kidney epithelium, with its intricate arrangement of highly specialized cell types, constitutes the functional core of the organ. Loss of kidney epithelium is linked to the loss of functional nephrons and a subsequent decline in kidney function. In kidney transplantation, epithelial injury signatures observed during post-transplantation surveillance are strong predictors of adverse kidney allograft outcomes. However, epithelial injury is currently neither monitored clinically nor addressed therapeutically after kidney transplantation. Several factors can contribute to allograft epithelial injury, including allograft rejection, drug toxicity, recurrent infections and postrenal obstruction. The injury mechanisms that underlie allograft injury overlap partially with those associated with acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) in the native kidney. Studies using advanced transcriptomic analyses of single cells from kidney or urine have identified a role for kidney injury-induced epithelial cell states in exacerbating and sustaining damage in AKI and CKD. These epithelial cell states and their associated expression signatures are also observed in transplanted kidney allografts, suggesting that the identification and characterization of transcriptomic epithelial cell states in kidney allografts may have potential clinical implications for diagnosis and therapy., (© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2024
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33. Their last will and testament: dying immune cells protect the urinary system with extracellular DNA traps.
- Author
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Steers NJ and Barasch J
- Subjects
- Kidney, Sodium, Cell Death, Protein-Arginine Deiminase Type 4, Humans, Animals, Mice, Urinary Tract Infections immunology, Bacterial Infections immunology, Extracellular Traps, Urinary Tract immunology, Neutrophils immunology, Macrophages immunology, Immunity, Innate
- Abstract
Like most epithelial organs, the bladder and kidney can be directly accessed by bacteria evolved for invasion. Epithelia and immune cells attempt to stymie this infection with biophysical and chemical mechanisms. Goldspink et al. connected the Na
+ gradient in the kidney medulla with an immune defense mounted by dead cells (namely, the explosive death of neutrophils and macrophages), resulting in extracellular DNA traps. The pathway from Na+ concentration to immune death is depicted., (Copyright © 2023 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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34. Protocol for virtual physical examination in an observational, longitudinal study evaluating virtual outcome measures in SLE.
- Author
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Askanase AD, Aranow C, Kim MY, Kamen DL, Arriens C, Khalili L, Tang W, Barasch J, Dall'Era M, and Mackay M
- Subjects
- Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Pandemics, Physical Examination, Observational Studies as Topic, COVID-19, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic complications, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: There is a lack of data on the use of telemedicine (TM) in SLE. SLE outcome measures remain complex, and clinicians and clinical trialists have raised concerns about the accuracy of virtual disease activity measures. This study evaluates the level of agreement between virtual SLE outcome measures and face-to-face (F2F) encounter. Here, we describe the study design, virtual physical examination protocol and demographics for the first 50 patients evaluated., Methods and Analysis: This is an observational, longitudinal study of 200 patients with SLE with varying levels of disease activity from 4 academic lupus centres serving diverse populations. Each study participant will be evaluated at a baseline and a follow-up visit. At each visit, participants are evaluated by the same physician first via a videoconference-based TM and then a F2F encounter. For this protocol, virtual physical examination guidelines relying on physician-directed patient self-examination were established. SLE disease activity measures will be completed immediately after the TM encounter and repeated after the F2F encounter for each visit. The degree of agreement between TM and F2F disease activity measures will be analysed using the Bland-Altman method. An interim analysis is planned after the enrolment of the first 50 participants., Ethics and Dissemination: This study has been reviewed by the Columbia University Medical Center Institutional Review Board (IRB Protocol #: AAAT6574). The full results of this study will be published after the final data analysis of 200 patients. The abrupt shift to TM visits due to the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted clinical practice and clinical trials. Establishing a high level of agreement between SLE disease activity measures obtained with videoconference TM and F2F at the same time point, will allow for improved assessment of disease activity when F2F data cannot be acquired. This information may guide both medical decision-making and provide reliable outcome measures for clinical research., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2023
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35. Temporal and spatial staging of lung alveolar regeneration is determined by the grainyhead transcription factor Tfcp2l1.
- Author
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Cardenas-Diaz FL, Liberti DC, Leach JP, Babu A, Barasch J, Shen T, Diaz-Miranda MA, Zhou S, Ying Y, Callaway DA, Morley MP, and Morrisey EE
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Cell Differentiation, Gene Expression Regulation, Pulmonary Alveoli, Lung metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism
- Abstract
Alveolar epithelial type 2 (AT2) cells harbor the facultative progenitor capacity in the lung alveolus to drive regeneration after lung injury. Using single-cell transcriptomics, software-guided segmentation of tissue damage, and in vivo mouse lineage tracing, we identified the grainyhead transcription factor cellular promoter 2-like 1 (Tfcp2l1) as a regulator of this regenerative process. Tfcp2l1 loss in adult AT2 cells inhibits self-renewal and enhances AT2-AT1 differentiation during tissue regeneration. Conversely, Tfcp2l1 blunts the proliferative response to inflammatory signaling during the early acute injury phase. Tfcp2l1 temporally regulates AT2 self-renewal and differentiation in alveolar regions undergoing active regeneration. Single-cell transcriptomics and lineage tracing reveal that Tfcp2l1 regulates cell fate dynamics across the AT2-AT1 differentiation and restricts the inflammatory program in murine AT2 cells. Organoid modeling shows that Tfcp2l1 regulation of interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor expression controlled these cell fate dynamics. These findings highlight the critical role Tfcp2l1 plays in balancing epithelial cell self-renewal and differentiation during alveolar regeneration., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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36. Structures of LRP2 reveal a molecular machine for endocytosis.
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Beenken A, Cerutti G, Brasch J, Guo Y, Sheng Z, Erdjument-Bromage H, Aziz Z, Robbins-Juarez SY, Chavez EY, Ahlsen G, Katsamba PS, Neubert TA, Fitzpatrick AWP, Barasch J, and Shapiro L
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Mice, Cryoelectron Microscopy, Kidney metabolism, Ligands, Endocytosis, Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2 genetics, Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2 metabolism
- Abstract
The low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-related protein 2 (LRP2 or megalin) is representative of the phylogenetically conserved subfamily of giant LDL receptor-related proteins, which function in endocytosis and are implicated in diseases of the kidney and brain. Here, we report high-resolution cryoelectron microscopy structures of LRP2 isolated from mouse kidney, at extracellular and endosomal pH. The structures reveal LRP2 to be a molecular machine that adopts a conformation for ligand binding at the cell surface and for ligand shedding in the endosome. LRP2 forms a homodimer, the conformational transformation of which is governed by pH-sensitive sites at both homodimer and intra-protomer interfaces. A subset of LRP2 deleterious missense variants in humans appears to impair homodimer assembly. These observations lay the foundation for further understanding the function and mechanism of LDL receptors and implicate homodimerization as a conserved feature of the LRP receptor subfamily., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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37. The Impact of Telemedicine on Rheumatology Care.
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Tang W, Inzerillo S, Weiner J, Khalili L, Barasch J, Gartshteyn Y, Dall'Era M, Aranow C, Mackay M, and Askanase A
- Abstract
Background: The pandemic disrupted the care of patients with rheumatic diseases; difficulties in access to care and its psychological impact affected quality of life. Telemedicine as an alternative to traditional face-to-face office visits has the potential to mitigate this impact., Objective: To evaluate patient and provider experience with telemedicine and its effect on care., Methods: We surveyed patients with rheumatic diseases and their rheumatology providers. The surveys were conducted in 2020 and repeated in 2021. We assessed data on quality of care and health-related quality of life., Results: Hundred patients and 17 providers responded to the survey. Patients reported higher satisfaction with telemedicine in 2021 compared to 2020 (94 vs. 84%), felt more comfortable with (96 vs. 86%), expressed a stronger preference for (22 vs. 16%), and higher intention to use telemedicine in the future (83 vs. 77%); patients thought physicians were able to address their concerns. While providers' satisfaction with telemedicine increased (18-76%), 14/17 providers believed that telemedicine visits were worse than in-person visits. There were no differences in annualized office visits and admissions. Mean EQ-5D score was 0.74, lower than general population (0.87) but equivalent to a subset of patients with SLE (0.74)., Conclusion: Our data showed a high level of satisfaction with telemedicine. The lower rheumatology provider satisfaction raises concern if telemedicine constitutes an acceptable alternative to in-person care. The stable number of office visits, admissions, and the similar quality of life to pre-pandemic level suggest effective management of rheumatic diseases using telemedicine/in-person hybrid care., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Tang, Inzerillo, Weiner, Khalili, Barasch, Gartshteyn, Dall'Era, Aranow, Mackay and Askanase.)
- Published
- 2022
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38. Snapshots of nascent RNA reveal cell- and stimulus-specific responses to acute kidney injury.
- Author
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Shen TH, Stauber J, Xu K, Jacunski A, Paragas N, Callahan M, Banlengchit R, Levitman AD, Desanti De Oliveira B, Beenken A, Grau MS, Mathieu E, Zhang Q, Li Y, Gopal T, Askanase N, Arumugam S, Mohan S, Good PI, Stevens JS, Lin F, Sia SK, Lin CS, D'Agati V, Kiryluk K, Tatonetti NP, and Barasch J
- Subjects
- Animals, Gene Expression Profiling, Mice, Acute Kidney Injury, RNA metabolism
- Abstract
The current strategy to detect acute injury of kidney tubular cells relies on changes in serum levels of creatinine. Yet serum creatinine (sCr) is a marker of both functional and pathological processes and does not adequately assay tubular injury. In addition, sCr may require days to reach diagnostic thresholds, yet tubular cells respond with programs of damage and repair within minutes or hours. To detect acute responses to clinically relevant stimuli, we created mice expressing Rosa26-floxed-stop uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (Uprt) and inoculated 4-thiouracil (4-TU) to tag nascent RNA at selected time points. Cre-driven 4-TU-tagged RNA was isolated from intact kidneys and demonstrated that volume depletion and ischemia induced different genetic programs in collecting ducts and intercalated cells. Even lineage-related cell types expressed different genes in response to the 2 stressors. TU tagging also demonstrated the transient nature of the responses. Because we placed Uprt in the ubiquitously active Rosa26 locus, nascent RNAs from many cell types can be tagged in vivo and their roles interrogated under various conditions. In short, 4-TU labeling identifies stimulus-specific, cell-specific, and time-dependent acute responses that are otherwise difficult to detect with other technologies and are entirely obscured when sCr is the sole metric of kidney damage.
- Published
- 2022
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39. Innate Bacteriostatic Mechanisms Defend the Urinary Tract.
- Author
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Munoz JA, Uhlemann AC, and Barasch J
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Kidney, Male, Cystitis complications, Cystitis microbiology, Urinary Tract, Urinary Tract Infections
- Abstract
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is the most common type of urogenital disease. UTI affects the urethra, bladder, ureter, and kidney. A total of 13.3% of women, 2.3% of men, and 3.4% of children in the United States will require treatment for UTI. Traditionally, bladder (cystitis) and kidney (pyelonephritis) infections are considered independently. However, both infections induce host defenses that are either shared or coordinated across the urinary tract. Here, we review the chemical and biophysical mechanisms of bacteriostasis, which limit the duration and severity of the illness. Urinary bacteria attempt to overcome each of these defenses, complicating description of the natural history of UTI.
- Published
- 2022
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40. Elevated Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associated Lipocalin Is Associated With the Severity of Kidney Injury and Poor Prognosis of Patients With COVID-19.
- Author
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Xu K, Shang N, Levitman A, Corker A, Kudose S, Yaeh A, Neupane U, Stevens J, Sampogna R, Mills AM, D'Agati V, Mohan S, Kiryluk K, and Barasch J
- Abstract
Introduction: Loss of kidney function is a common feature of COVID-19 infection, but serum creatinine (SCr) is not a sensitive or specific marker of kidney injury. We tested whether molecular biomarkers of tubular injury measured at hospital admission were associated with acute kidney injury (AKI) in those with COVID-19 infection., Methods: This is a prospective cohort observational study consisting of 444 consecutive patients with SARS-CoV-2 enrolled in the Columbia University emergency department (ED) at the peak of the pandemic in New York (March 2020-April 2020). Urine and blood were collected simultaneously at hospital admission (median time: day 0, interquartile range: 0-2 days), and urine biomarkers were analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and a novel dipstick. Kidney biopsies were probed for biomarker RNA and for histopathologic acute tubular injury (ATI) scores., Results: Admission urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) level was associated with AKI diagnosis (267 ± 301 vs. 96 ± 139 ng/ml, P < 0.0001) and staging; uNGAL levels >150 ng/ml had 80% specificity and 75% sensitivity to diagnose AKI stages 2 to 3. Admission uNGAL level quantitatively associated with prolonged AKI, dialysis, shock, prolonged hospitalization, and in-hospital death, even when admission SCr level was not elevated. The risk of dialysis increased almost 4-fold per SD of uNGAL independently of baseline SCr, comorbidities, and proteinuria (odds ratio [OR] [95% CI]: 3.59 [1.83-7.45], P < 0.001). In the kidneys of those with COVID-19, NGAL mRNA expression broadened in parallel with severe histopathologic injury (ATI). Conversely, low uNGAL levels at admission ruled out stages 2 to 3 AKI (negative predictive value: 0.95, 95% CI: 0.92-0.97) and the need for dialysis (negative predictive value: 0.98, 95% CI: 0.96-0.99). Although proteinuria and urinary (u)KIM-1 were implicated in tubular injury, neither was diagnostic of AKI stages., Conclusion: In the patients with COVID-19, uNGAL level was quantitatively associated with histopathologic injury (ATI), loss of kidney function (AKI), and severity of patient outcomes., (© 2021 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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41. Longitudinal Outcomes of COVID-19-Associated Collapsing Glomerulopathy and Other Podocytopathies.
- Author
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Kudose S, Santoriello D, Bomback AS, Sekulic M, Batal I, Stokes MB, Ghavami IA, Kim JS, Marasa M, Xu K, Peleg Y, Barasch J, Canetta P, Rasouly HM, Gharavi AG, Markowitz GS, and D'Agati VD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, COVID-19 pathology, COVID-19 therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Recovery of Function, Renal Dialysis, Renal Insufficiency therapy, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, COVID-19 complications, Kidney Glomerulus pathology, Podocytes pathology, Renal Insufficiency pathology, Renal Insufficiency virology
- Abstract
Background: The long-term outcome of COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy is unknown., Methods: We retrospectively identified 76 native kidney biopsies from patients with history of COVID-19 between March 2020 and April 2021. Presenting and outcome data were obtained for all 23 patients with collapsing glomerulopathy and for seven patients with noncollapsing podocytopathies. We performed APOL1 genotyping by Sanger sequencing, immunostaining for spike and nucleocapsid proteins, and in situ hybridization for SARS-CoV-2., Results: The 23 patients with COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy were median age 57 years (range, 35-72), included 16 men, and were predominantly (91%) Black. Severity of COVID-19 was mild or moderate in most (77%) patients. All but one patient presented with AKI, 17 had nephrotic-range proteinuria, and six had nephrotic syndrome. Fourteen (61%) patients required dialysis at presentation. Among 17 patients genotyped, 16 (94%) were high-risk APOL1 . Among 22 (96%) patients with median follow-up at 155 days (range, 30-412), 11 (50%) received treatment for COVID-19, and eight (36%) received glucocorticoid therapy for podocytopathy. At follow-up, 19 (86%) patients were alive, and 15 (68%) were dialysis free, including seven of 14 who initially required dialysis. The dialysis-free patients included 64% (seven of 11) of those treated for COVID-19 and 75% (six of eight) of those treated with glucocorticoids for podocytopathy. Overall, 36% achieved partial remission of proteinuria, 32% had no remission, and 32% reached combined end points of ESKD or death. Viral infection of the kidney was not detected., Conclusions: Half of 14 patients with COVID-19-associated collapsing glomerulopathy requiring dialysis achieved dialysis independence, but the long-term prognosis of residual proteinuric CKD remains guarded, indicating a need for more effective therapy., (Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2021
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42. Iron deficiency exacerbates cisplatin- or rhabdomyolysis-induced acute kidney injury through promoting iron-catalyzed oxidative damage.
- Author
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Zhao S, Wang X, Zheng X, Liang X, Wang Z, Zhang J, Zhao X, Zhuang S, Pan Q, Sun F, Shang W, Barasch J, and Qiu A
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Cisplatin adverse effects, Humans, Iron, Oxidative Stress, Acute Kidney Injury chemically induced, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency, Rhabdomyolysis chemically induced
- Abstract
Iron deficiency is the most common micronutrient deficiency worldwide. While iron deficiency is known to suppress embryonic organogenesis, its effect on the adult organ in the context of clinically relevant damage has not been considered. Here we report that iron deficiency is a risk factor for nephrotoxic intrinsic acute kidney injury of the nephron (iAKI). Iron deficiency exacerbated cisplatin-induced iAKI by markedly increasing non-heme catalytic iron and Nox4 protein which together catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals followed by protein and DNA oxidation, apoptosis and ferroptosis. Crosstalk between non-heme catalytic iron/Nox4 and downstream oxidative damage generated a mutual amplification cycle that facilitated rapid progression of cisplatin-induced iAKI. Iron deficiency also exacerbated a second model of iAKI, rhabdomyolysis, via increasing catalytic heme-iron. Heme-iron induced lipid peroxidation and DNA oxidation by interacting with Nox4-independent mechanisms, promoting p53/p21 activity and cellular senescence. Our data suggests that correcting iron deficiency and/or targeting specific catalytic iron species are strategies to mitigate iAKI in a wide range of patients with diverse forms of kidney injury., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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43. Kidney injury biomarkers during exposure to tenofovir-based preexposure prophylaxis.
- Author
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Nickolas TL, Barasch J, Mugwanya KK, Branch AD, Heffron R, Wanga V, Mugo NR, Ronald A, Celum C, Donnell D, Baeten JM, and Wyatt CM
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers, Emtricitabine adverse effects, Humans, Kidney, Tenofovir adverse effects, Anti-HIV Agents adverse effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections prevention & control, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
- Abstract
We previously reported a higher incidence of non-albumin proteinuria and a small but significant decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) among HIV-negative adults randomized to emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate preexposure prophylaxis (FTC/TDF PrEP) versus placebo. In a nested case--control study among participants randomized to FTC/TDF PrEP, established kidney injury biomarkers measured at 12 months were not significantly different between participants who subsequently experienced one of these kidney endpoints and randomly selected controls who did not., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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44. Copy Number Variant Analysis and Genome-wide Association Study Identify Loci with Large Effect for Vesicoureteral Reflux.
- Author
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Verbitsky M, Krithivasan P, Batourina E, Khan A, Graham SE, Marasà M, Kim H, Lim TY, Weng PL, Sánchez-Rodríguez E, Mitrotti A, Ahram DF, Zanoni F, Fasel DA, Westland R, Sampson MG, Zhang JY, Bodria M, Kil BH, Shril S, Gesualdo L, Torri F, Scolari F, Izzi C, van Wijk JAE, Saraga M, Santoro D, Conti G, Barton DE, Dobson MG, Puri P, Furth SL, Warady BA, Pisani I, Fiaccadori E, Allegri L, Degl'Innocenti ML, Piaggio G, Alam S, Gigante M, Zaza G, Esposito P, Lin F, Simões-E-Silva AC, Brodkiewicz A, Drozdz D, Zachwieja K, Miklaszewska M, Szczepanska M, Adamczyk P, Tkaczyk M, Tomczyk D, Sikora P, Mizerska-Wasiak M, Krzemien G, Szmigielska A, Zaniew M, Lozanovski VJ, Gucev Z, Ionita-Laza I, Stanaway IB, Crosslin DR, Wong CS, Hildebrandt F, Barasch J, Kenny EE, Loos RJF, Levy B, Ghiggeri GM, Hakonarson H, Latos-Bieleńska A, Materna-Kiryluk A, Darlow JM, Tasic V, Willer C, Kiryluk K, Sanna-Cherchi S, Mendelsohn CL, and Gharavi AG
- Abstract
Background: Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is a common, familial genitourinary disorder, and a major cause of pediatric urinary tract infection (UTI) and kidney failure. The genetic basis of VUR is not well understood., Methods: A diagnostic analysis sought rare, pathogenic copy number variant (CNV) disorders among 1737 patients with VUR. A GWAS was performed in 1395 patients and 5366 controls, of European ancestry., Results: Altogether, 3% of VUR patients harbored an undiagnosed rare CNV disorder, such as the 1q21.1, 16p11.2, 22q11.21, and triple X syndromes ((OR, 3.12; 95% CI, 2.10 to 4.54; P =6.35×10
-8 ) The GWAS identified three study-wide significant and five suggestive loci with large effects (ORs, 1.41-6.9), containing canonical developmental genes expressed in the developing urinary tract ( WDPCP, OTX1, BMP5, VANGL1, and WNT5A ). In particular, 3.3% of VUR patients were homozygous for an intronic variant in WDPCP (rs13013890; OR, 3.65; 95% CI, 2.39 to 5.56; P =1.86×10-9 ). This locus was associated with multiple genitourinary phenotypes in the UK Biobank and eMERGE studies. Analysis of Wnt5a mutant mice confirmed the role of Wnt5a signaling in bladder and ureteric morphogenesis., Conclusions: These data demonstrate the genetic heterogeneity of VUR. Altogether, 6% of patients with VUR harbored a rare CNV or a common variant genotype conferring an OR >3. Identification of these genetic risk factors has multiple implications for clinical care and for analysis of outcomes in VUR., (Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.)- Published
- 2021
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45. Mutations in transcription factor CP2-like 1 may cause a novel syndrome with distal renal tubulopathy in humans.
- Author
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Klämbt V, Werth M, Onuchic-Whitford AC, Getwan M, Kitzler TM, Buerger F, Mao Y, Deutsch K, Mann N, Majmundar AJ, Kaminski MM, Shen T, Schmidt-Ott KM, Shalaby M, El Desoky S, Kari JA, Shril S, Lienkamp SS, Barasch J, and Hildebrandt F
- Subjects
- Animals, Child, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Female, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Kidney Diseases metabolism, Kidney Diseases pathology, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Rats, Repressor Proteins metabolism, Single-Cell Analysis, Transcription Factors genetics, Transcription Factors metabolism, Exome Sequencing, Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition, Kidney Diseases etiology, Mutation, Repressor Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: An underlying monogenic cause of early-onset chronic kidney disease (CKD) can be detected in ∼20% of individuals. For many etiologies of CKD manifesting before 25 years of age, >200 monogenic causative genes have been identified to date, leading to the elucidation of mechanisms of renal pathogenesis., Methods: In 51 families with echogenic kidneys and CKD, we performed whole-exome sequencing to identify novel monogenic causes of CKD., Results: We discovered a homozygous truncating mutation in the transcription factor gene transcription factor CP2-like 1 (TFCP2L1) in an Arabic patient of consanguineous descent. The patient developed CKD by the age of 2 months and had episodes of severe hypochloremic, hyponatremic and hypokalemic alkalosis, seizures, developmental delay and hypotonia together with cataracts. We found that TFCP2L1 was localized throughout kidney development particularly in the distal nephron. Interestingly, TFCP2L1 induced the growth and development of renal tubules from rat mesenchymal cells. Conversely, the deletion of TFCP2L1 in mice was previously shown to lead to reduced expression of renal cell markers including ion transporters and cell identity proteins expressed in different segments of the distal nephron. TFCP2L1 localized to the nucleus in HEK293T cells only upon coexpression with its paralog upstream-binding protein 1 (UBP1). A TFCP2L1 mutant complementary DNA (cDNA) clone that represented the patient's mutation failed to form homo- and heterodimers with UBP1, an essential step for its transcriptional activity., Conclusion: Here, we identified a loss-of-function TFCP2L1 mutation as a potential novel cause of CKD in childhood accompanied by a salt-losing tubulopathy., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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46. A uropathogenic E. coli UTI89 model of prostatic inflammation and collagen accumulation for use in studying aberrant collagen production in the prostate.
- Author
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Ruetten H, Sandhu J, Mueller B, Wang P, Zhang HL, Wegner KA, Cadena M, Sandhu S, L Abler L, Zhu J, O'Driscoll CA, Chelgren B, Wang Z, Shen T, Barasch J, Bjorling DE, and Vezina CM
- Subjects
- Actins metabolism, Animals, Collagen Type I, alpha 1 Chain, Disease Models, Animal, Escherichia coli Infections complications, Leukocyte Common Antigens metabolism, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Prostate metabolism, Prostate pathology, Prostatitis metabolism, Prostatitis pathology, Tissue Culture Techniques, Mice, Collagen Type I metabolism, Escherichia coli Infections microbiology, Procollagen metabolism, Prostate microbiology, Prostatitis microbiology, Uropathogenic Escherichia coli pathogenicity
- Abstract
Bacterial infection is one known etiology of prostatic inflammation. Prostatic inflammation is associated with prostatic collagen accumulation and both are linked to progressive lower urinary tract symptoms in men. We characterized a model of prostatic inflammation using transurethral instillations of Escherichia coli UTI89 in C57BL/6J male mice with the goal of determining the optimal instillation conditions, understanding the impact of instillation conditions on urinary physiology, and identifying ideal prostatic lobes and collagen 1a1 prostatic cell types for further analysis. The smallest instillation volume tested (50 µL) distributed exclusively to the bladder, 100- and 200-µL volumes distributed to the bladder and prostate, and a 500-µL volume distributed to the bladder, prostate, and ureter. A threshold optical density of 0.4 E. coli UTI89 in the instillation fluid was necessary for significant ( P < 0.05) prostate colonization. E. coli UTI89 infection resulted in a low frequency, high volume spontaneous voiding pattern. This phenotype was due to exposure to E. coli UTI89, not catheterization alone, and was minimally altered by a 50-µL increase in instillation volume and doubling of E. coli concentration. Prostate inflammation was isolated to the dorsal prostate and was accompanied by increased collagen density. This was partnered with increased density of protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type C
+ , procollagen type I-α1 + copositive cells and decreased density of α2 -smooth muscle actin+ , procollagen type I-α1 + copositive cells. Overall, we determined that this model is effective in altering urinary phenotype and producing prostatic inflammation and collagen accumulation in mice.- Published
- 2021
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47. Rule Out Acute Kidney Injury in the Emergency Department With a Urinary Dipstick.
- Author
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Stevens JS, Xu K, Corker A, Gopal TS, Sayan OR, Geraghty EP, Yaeh AM, Kosuri YD, Burton JR, Lincoln SV, Callahan MP, Breheney RK, Beenken AS, Gamino JN, Felman AE, Gehani A, Giordano HA, Gozali A, Guerrero Herrera EF, Hatcher BA, Kheir LA, Li Y, Mitsui EK, Nha JI, Sayan AT, Spaiser SJ, Arumugam S, Sia SK, King KL, Mohan S, and Barasch J
- Abstract
Introduction: The identification of acute injury of the kidney relies on serum creatinine (SCr), a functional marker with poor temporal resolution as well as limited sensitivity and specificity for cellular injury. In contrast, urinary biomarkers of kidney injury have the potential to detect cellular stress and damage in real time., Methods: To detect the response of the kidney to injury, we have tested a lateral flow dipstick that measures a urinary protein called neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL). Analysis of urine was performed in a prospective cohort of 479 patients (final cohort N = 426) entering an emergency department in New York City and subsequently admitted for inpatient care., Results: Colorimetric development had high interrater reliability (88% concordance rate) and correlated with traditional enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) measurements (ρ = 0.732, P < .0001). Of the 14% of the cohort who met Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) SCr criteria for acute kidney injury (AKI), 67% demonstrated transient (<2 days) and 33% demonstrated sustained (>2 days) elevation of SCr. Comparing the outcomes of patients with sustained versus transient or undetectable changes in SCr revealed that the urinary NGAL (uNGAL) dipstick had high specificity and negative predictive value (NPV) (high- vs. low-intermediate readings, sensitivity = 0.55, specificity = 0.91, positive predictive value = 0.24, NPV = 0.97, χ
2 = 20.39, P < 0.001)., Conclusion: We show that the introduction of a bedside uNGAL dipstick permits accurate triage by identifying individuals who do not have tubular injury. In an era of shortening length of stay and rapid decisions based on isolated SCr measurements, real-time exclusion of kidney injury by a dipstick will be particularly useful to overcome the retrospective, insensitive, and nonspecific attributes of SCr., (© 2020 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2020
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48. Postmortem Kidney Pathology Findings in Patients with COVID-19.
- Author
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Santoriello D, Khairallah P, Bomback AS, Xu K, Kudose S, Batal I, Barasch J, Radhakrishnan J, D'Agati V, and Markowitz G
- Subjects
- Acute Kidney Injury pathology, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Autopsy, COVID-19, Female, Humans, Kidney ultrastructure, Kidney Tubules pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections pathology, Kidney pathology, Pneumonia, Viral pathology
- Abstract
Background: AKI is common among hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and is an independent risk factor for mortality. Although there are numerous potential mechanisms underlying COVID-19-associated AKI, our current knowledge of kidney pathologic findings in COVID-19 is limited., Methods: We examined the postmortem kidneys from 42 patients who died of COVID-19. We reviewed light microscopy findings in all autopsies and performed immunofluorescence, electron microscopy, and in situ hybridization studies for SARS-CoV-2 on a subset of samples., Results: The cohort had a median age of 71.5 years (range, 38-97 years); 69% were men, 57% were Hispanic, and 73% had a history of hypertension. Among patients with available data, AKI developed in 31 of 33 patients (94%), including 6 with AKI stage 1, 9 with stage 2, and 16 with stage 3. The predominant finding correlating with AKI was acute tubular injury. However, the degree of acute tubular injury was often less severe than predicted for the degree of AKI, suggesting a role for hemodynamic factors, such as aggressive fluid management. Background changes of hypertensive arterionephrosclerosis and diabetic glomerulosclerosis were frequent but typically mild. We identified focal kidney fibrin thrombi in 6 of 42 (14%) autopsies. A single Black patient had collapsing FSGS. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy were largely unrevealing, and in situ hybridization for SARS-CoV-2 showed no definitive positivity., Conclusions: Among a cohort of 42 patients dying with COVID-19, autopsy histologic evaluation revealed acute tubular injury, which was typically mild relative to the degree of creatinine elevation. These findings suggest potential for reversibility upon resolution of SARS-CoV-2 infection., (Copyright © 2020 by the American Society of Nephrology.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Kidney Biopsy Findings in Patients with COVID-19.
- Author
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Kudose S, Batal I, Santoriello D, Xu K, Barasch J, Peleg Y, Canetta P, Ratner LE, Marasa M, Gharavi AG, Stokes MB, Markowitz GS, and D'Agati VD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biopsy, COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections complications, Coronavirus Infections immunology, Female, Humans, Kidney ultrastructure, Kidney virology, Kidney Diseases pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral complications, Pneumonia, Viral immunology, SARS-CoV-2, Betacoronavirus isolation & purification, Coronavirus Infections pathology, Kidney pathology, Pneumonia, Viral pathology
- Abstract
Background: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is thought to cause kidney injury by a variety of mechanisms. To date, pathologic analyses have been limited to patient reports and autopsy series., Methods: We evaluated biopsy samples of native and allograft kidneys from patients with COVID-19 at a single center in New York City between March and June of 2020. We also used immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and electron microscopy to examine this tissue for presence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)., Results: The study group included 17 patients with COVID-19 (12 men, 12 black; median age of 54 years). Sixteen patients had comorbidities, including hypertension, obesity, diabetes, malignancy, or a kidney or heart allograft. Nine patients developed COVID-19 pneumonia. Fifteen patients (88%) presented with AKI; nine had nephrotic-range proteinuria. Among 14 patients with a native kidney biopsy, 5 were diagnosed with collapsing glomerulopathy, 1 was diagnosed with minimal change disease, 2 were diagnosed with membranous glomerulopathy, 1 was diagnosed with crescentic transformation of lupus nephritis, 1 was diagnosed with anti-GBM nephritis, and 4 were diagnosed with isolated acute tubular injury. The three allograft specimens showed grade 2A acute T cell-mediated rejection, cortical infarction, or acute tubular injury. Genotyping of three patients with collapsing glomerulopathy and the patient with minimal change disease revealed that all four patients had APOL1 high-risk gene variants. We found no definitive evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in kidney cells. Biopsy diagnosis informed treatment and prognosis in all patients., Conclusions: Patients with COVID-19 develop a wide spectrum of glomerular and tubular diseases. Our findings provide evidence against direct viral infection of the kidneys as the major pathomechanism for COVID-19-related kidney injury and implicate cytokine-mediated effects and heightened adaptive immune responses., (Copyright © 2020 by the American Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2020
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50. The mitochondrial metal transporters mitoferrin1 and mitoferrin2 are required for liver regeneration and cell proliferation in mice.
- Author
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Seguin A, Jia X, Earl AM, Li L, Wallace J, Qiu A, Bradley T, Shrestha R, Troadec MB, Hockin M, Titen S, Warner DE, Dowdle PT, Wohlfahrt ME, Hillas E, Firpo MA, Phillips JD, Kaplan J, Paw BH, Barasch J, and Ward DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Homeostasis, Iron metabolism, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mitochondria, Liver metabolism, Cation Transport Proteins physiology, Cell Proliferation physiology, Liver Regeneration physiology, Membrane Transport Proteins physiology
- Abstract
Mitochondrial iron import is essential for iron-sulfur cluster formation and heme biosynthesis. Two nuclear-encoded vertebrate mitochondrial high-affinity iron importers, mitoferrin1 (Mfrn1) and Mfrn2, have been identified in mammals. In mice, the gene encoding Mfrn1, solute carrier family 25 member 37 ( Slc25a37 ), is highly expressed in sites of erythropoiesis, and whole-body Slc25a37 deletion leads to lethality. Here, we report that mice with a deletion of Slc25a28 (encoding Mfrn2) are born at expected Mendelian ratios, but show decreased male fertility due to reduced sperm numbers and sperm motility. Mfrn2
-/- mice placed on a low-iron diet exhibited reduced mitochondrial manganese, cobalt, and zinc levels, but not reduced iron. Hepatocyte-specific loss of Slc25a37 (encoding Mfrn1) in Mfrn2-/- mice did not affect animal viability, but resulted in a 40% reduction in mitochondrial iron and reduced levels of oxidative phosphorylation proteins. Placing animals on a low-iron diet exaggerated the reduction in mitochondrial iron observed in liver-specific Mfrn1/2 -knockout animals. Mfrn1-/- / Mfrn2-/- bone marrow-derived macrophages or skin fibroblasts in vitro were unable to proliferate, and overexpression of Mfrn1-GFP or Mfrn2-GFP prevented this proliferation defect. Loss of both mitoferrins in hepatocytes dramatically reduced regeneration in the adult mouse liver, further supporting the notion that both mitoferrins transport iron and that their absence limits proliferative capacity of mammalian cells. We conclude that Mfrn1 and Mfrn2 contribute to mitochondrial iron homeostasis and are required for high-affinity iron import during active proliferation of mammalian cells., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest—The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2020 Seguin et al.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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