학술논문

FcER1: A Novel Molecule Implicated in the Progression of Human Diabetic Kidney Disease
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Kidney Disease
Biotechnology
Diabetes
Genetics
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Metabolic and endocrine
Renal and urogenital
Adult
Aged
Cohort Studies
Diabetic Nephropathies
Disease Progression
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Regulatory Networks
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Kidney
Leukocytes
Mononuclear
Male
Middle Aged
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
Receptors
IgE
Signal Transduction
diabetes
DKD
FcER1
chronic kidney disease
mast cells
Immunology
Medical Microbiology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a key microvascular complication of diabetes, with few therapies for targeting renal disease pathogenesis and progression. We performed transcriptional and protein studies on 103 unique blood and kidney tissue samples from patients with and without diabetes to understand the pathophysiology of DKD injury and its progression. The study was based on the use of 3 unique patient cohorts: peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) transcriptional studies were conducted on 30 patients with DKD with advancing kidney injury; Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) data was downloaded, containing transcriptional measures from 51 microdissected glomerulous from patients with DKD. Additionally, 12 independent kidney tissue sections from patients with or without DKD were used for validation of target genes in diabetic kidney injury by kidney tissue immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. PBMC DKD transcriptional analysis, identified 853 genes (p < 0.05) with increasing expression with progression of albuminuria and kidney injury in patients with diabetes. GEO data was downloaded, normalized, and analyzed for significantly changed genes. Of the 325 significantly up regulated genes in DKD glomerulous (p < 0.05), 28 overlapped in PBMC and diabetic kidney, with perturbed FcER1 signaling as a significantly enriched canonical pathway. FcER1 was validated to be significantly increased in advanced DKD, where it was also seen to be specifically co-expressed in the kidney biopsy with tissue mast cells. In conclusion, we demonstrate how leveraging public and private human transcriptional datasets can discover and validate innate immunity and inflammation as key mechanistic pathways in DKD progression, and uncover FcER1 as a putative new DKD target for rational drug design.