4.7 Article

The Two Kidney to One Kidney Transition and Transplant Glomerulopathy: A Podocyte Perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 1450-1465

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2014030287

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [R01-DK46073]
  2. National Institutes of Health National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (University of Michigan O'Brien Kidney Core Center) [P30-DK081943, K08-DK088944, 5T32-DK7378-34]
  3. NephCure-ASN Foundation
  4. DBK through the Robert C. Kelsch Collegiate Professorship

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The attrition rate of functioning allografts beyond the first year has not improved despite improved immunosuppression, suggesting that nonimmune mechanisms could be involved. Notably, glomerulopathies may account for about 40% of failed kidney allografts beyond the first year of engraftment, and glomerulosclerosis and progression to ESRD are caused by podocyte depletion. Model systems demonstrate that nephrectonny can precipitate hypertrophic podocyte stress that triggers progressive podocyte depletion leading to ESRD, and that this process is accompanied by accelerated podocyte detachment that can be measured in urine. Here, we show that kidney transplantation reverse nephrectomy is also associated with podocyte hypertrophy and increased podocyte detachment. Patients with stable normal allograft function and no proteinuria had levels of podocyte detachment similar to levels in two-kidney controls as measured by urine podocyte assay. By contrast, patients who developed transplant glomerulopathy had 10- to 20-fold increased levels of podocyte detachment. Morphometric studies showed that a subset of these patients developed reduced glomerular podocyte density within 2 years of transplantation due to reduced podocyte number per glomerulus. A second subset developed glomerulopathy by an average of 10 years after transplantation due to reduced glomerular podocyte number and glomerular tuft enlargement. Reduced podocyte density was associated with reduced eGFR, glomerulosclerosis, and proteinuria. These data are compatible with the hypothesis that podocyte depletion contributes to allograft failure and reduced allograft half-life. Mechanisms may include immune-driven processes affecting the podocyte or other cells and/or hypertrophy-induced podocyte stress causing accelerated podocyte detachment, which would be amenable to nonimmune therapeutic targeting.

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