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Modification of kidney barrier function by the urokinase receptor

Authors :
Wei, Changli
Möller, Clemens C.
Altintas, Mehmet M.
Li, Jing
Schwarz, Karin
Zacchigna, Serena
Xie, Liang
Henger, Anna
Schmid, Holger
Rastaldi, María P.
Cowan, Peter J.
Kretzler, Matthias
Parrilla, Roberto L.
Bendayan, Möise
Gupta, Vineet
Nikolic, Boris
Kalluri, Raghu
Carmeliet, Peter
Mundel, Peter
Reiser, Jonche
Wei, Changli
Möller, Clemens C.
Altintas, Mehmet M.
Li, Jing
Schwarz, Karin
Zacchigna, Serena
Xie, Liang
Henger, Anna
Schmid, Holger
Rastaldi, María P.
Cowan, Peter J.
Kretzler, Matthias
Parrilla, Roberto L.
Bendayan, Möise
Gupta, Vineet
Nikolic, Boris
Kalluri, Raghu
Carmeliet, Peter
Mundel, Peter
Reiser, Jonche
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Podocyte dysfunction, represented by foot process effacement and proteinuria, is often the starting point for progressive kidney disease. Therapies aimed at the cellular level of the disease are currently not available. Here we show that induction of urokinase receptor (uPAR) signaling in podocytes leads to foot process effacement and urinary protein loss via a mechanism that includes lipid-dependent activation of v3 integrin. Mice lacking uPAR (Plaur- /- ) are protected from lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-mediated proteinuria but develop disease after expression of a constitutively active 3 integrin. Gene transfer studies reveal a prerequisite for uPAR expression in podocytes, but not in endothelial cells, for the development of LPS-mediated proteinuria. Mechanistically, uPAR is required to activate v3 integrin in podocytes, promoting cell motility and activation of the small GTPases Cdc42 and Rac1. Blockade of v3 integrin reduces podocyte motility in vitro and lowers proteinuria in mice. Our findings show a physiological role for uPAR signaling in the regulation of kidney permeability

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103390760
Document Type :
Electronic Resource