4.7 Article

α- and β-Adducin polymorphisms affect podocyte proteins and proteinuria in rodents and decline of renal function in human IgA nephropathy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM
Volume 88, Issue 2, Pages 203-217

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00109-009-0549-x

Keywords

Adducin; Genetic renal disease; Glomerular disease; IgA nephropathy; Podocytes; Proteinuria

Funding

  1. Telethon Foundation [EC 861]
  2. Italian Ministry of University and Scientific Research [RBLA038RMA-010]
  3. Ingenious Hypercare [LSHM-CT-2006-037093]
  4. HYPERGENES [HEALTH-F4-2007-201550]
  5. National Institutes of Health [1 R01 HL075714]

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Adducins are cytoskeletal actin-binding proteins (alpha, beta, gamma) that function as heterodimers and heterotetramers and are encoded by distinct genes. Experimental and clinical evidence implicates alpha- and beta-adducin variants in hypertension and renal dysfunction. Here, we have addressed the role of alpha- and beta-adducin on glomerular function and disease using beta-adducin null mice, congenic substrains for alpha- and beta-adducin from the Milan hypertensive (MHS) and Milan normotensive (MNS) rats and patients with IgA nephropathy. Targeted deletion of beta-adducin in mice reduced urinary protein excretion, preceded by an increase of podocyte protein expression (phospho-nephrin, synaptopodin, alpha-actinin, ZO-1, Fyn). The introgression of polymorphic MHS beta-adducin locus into MNS (Add2, 529R) rats was associated with an early reduction of podocyte protein expression (nephrin, synaptopodin, alpha-actinin, ZO-1, podocin, Fyn), followed by severe glomerular and interstitial lesions and increased urinary protein excretion. These alterations were markedly attenuated when the polymorphic MHS alpha-adducin locus was also present (Add1, 316Y). In patients with IgA nephropathy, the rate of decline of renal function over time was associated to polymorphic beta-adducin (ADD2, 1797T, rs4984) with a significant interaction with alpha-adducin (ADD1, 460W, rs4961). These findings suggest that adducin genetic variants participate in the development of glomerular lesions by modulating the expression of specific podocyte proteins.

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