4.7 Article

Effects of Environmental Conditions on Nephron Number: Modeling Maternal Disease and Epigenetic Regulation in Renal Development

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22084157

Keywords

renal development; nephron number; diabetic nephropathy; epigenetic regulation; iron deficiency; DNA methylation

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) [CRC 992, CRC 1192, Ju295/14-1, Kr1984/4-1]
  2. Heisenberg program
  3. European Research Council [616891]
  4. H2020-IMI2 consortium BEAt-DKD (Biomarker Enterprise to Attack Diabetic Kidney Disease) [115974]
  5. STOP-FSGS (Speed TranslationOriented Progress to Treat Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis) [01GM1901C]
  6. Else-Kroner Fresenius Stiftung (iPRIME (innovative Promotionsforderung im Bereich translationale Entzundungsforschung))
  7. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [031 A538A/A538C RBC, 031L0101B/031L0101C de.NBI-epi, 031L0106 de.STAIR(de.NBI)]
  8. Collaborative Research Centre 992 Medical Epigenetics (Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft (DFG) grant [SFB 992/1 2012]
  9. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC-2189, 390939984]

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Research suggests that low nephron numbers at birth may increase the risk of chronic kidney disease or hypertension later in life. Environmental stressors such as maternal malnutrition, medication, and smoking can affect renal size at birth. The study also found that using metanephric organ cultures can simulate single-variable environmental conditions, aiding in studying the role of epigenetic modifiers in renal development.
A growing body of evidence suggests that low nephron numbers at birth can increase the risk of chronic kidney disease or hypertension later in life. Environmental stressors, such as maternal malnutrition, medication and smoking, can influence renal size at birth. Using metanephric organ cultures to model single-variable environmental conditions, models of maternal disease were evaluated for patterns of developmental impairment. While hyperthermia had limited effects on renal development, fetal iron deficiency was associated with severe impairment of renal growth and nephrogenesis with an all-proximal phenotype. Culturing kidney explants under high glucose conditions led to cellular and transcriptomic changes resembling human diabetic nephropathy. Short-term high glucose culture conditions were sufficient for long-term alterations in DNA methylation-associated epigenetic memory. Finally, the role of epigenetic modifiers in renal development was tested using a small compound library. Among the selected epigenetic inhibitors, various compounds elicited an effect on renal growth, such as HDAC (entinostat, TH39), histone demethylase (deferasirox, deferoxamine) and histone methyltransferase (cyproheptadine) inhibitors. Thus, metanephric organ cultures provide a valuable system for studying metabolic conditions and a tool for screening for epigenetic modifiers in renal development.

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