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Endogenous adenine mediates kidney injury in diabetic models and predicts diabetic kidney disease in patients

Authors :
Kumar Sharma
Guanshi Zhang
Jens Hansen
Petter Bjornstad
Hak Joo Lee
Rajasree Menon
Leila Hejazi
Jian-Jun Liu
Anthony Franzone
Helen C. Looker
Byeong Yeob Choi
Roman Fernandez
Manjeri A. Venkatachalam
Luxcia Kugathasan
Vikas S. Sridhar
Loki Natarajan
Jing Zhang
Varun S. Sharma
Brian Kwan
Sushrut S. Waikar
Jonathan Himmelfarb
Katherine R. Tuttle
Bryan Kestenbaum
Tobias Fuhrer
Harold I. Feldman
Ian H. de Boer
Fabio C. Tucci
John Sedor
Hiddo Lambers Heerspink
Jennifer Schaub
Edgar A. Otto
Jeffrey B. Hodgin
Matthias Kretzler
Christopher R. Anderton
Theodore Alexandrov
David Cherney
Su Chi Lim
Robert G. Nelson
Jonathan Gelfond
Ravi Iyengar
for the Kidney Precision Medicine Project
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol 133, Iss 20 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2023.

Abstract

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) can lead to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and mortality; however, few mechanistic biomarkers are available for high-risk patients, especially those without macroalbuminuria. Urine from participants with diabetes from the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) study, the Singapore Study of Macro-angiopathy and Micro-vascular Reactivity in Type 2 Diabetes (SMART2D), and the American Indian Study determined whether urine adenine/creatinine ratio (UAdCR) could be a mechanistic biomarker for ESKD. ESKD and mortality were associated with the highest UAdCR tertile in the CRIC study and SMART2D. ESKD was associated with the highest UAdCR tertile in patients without macroalbuminuria in the CRIC study, SMART2D, and the American Indian study. Empagliflozin lowered UAdCR in nonmacroalbuminuric participants. Spatial metabolomics localized adenine to kidney pathology, and single-cell transcriptomics identified ribonucleoprotein biogenesis as a top pathway in proximal tubules of patients without macroalbuminuria, implicating mTOR. Adenine stimulated matrix in tubular cells via mTOR and stimulated mTOR in mouse kidneys. A specific inhibitor of adenine production was found to reduce kidney hypertrophy and kidney injury in diabetic mice. We propose that endogenous adenine may be a causative factor in DKD.

Subjects

Subjects :
Nephrology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15588238
Volume :
133
Issue :
20
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.15a3cc7202a34114a72f51162fa19310
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI170341