4.8 Article

Nuclear relocation of the nephrin and CD2AP-binding protein dendrin promotes apoptosis of podocytes

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0700917104

Keywords

glomerular injury; proapoptotic signaling; TGF-beta signaling; slit diaphragm

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK 062472, R01 DK062472, DK 57683, DK 064236, P50 DK064236, R01 DK057683] Funding Source: Medline

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Kidney podocytes and their slit diaphragms (SDs) form the final barrier to urinary protein loss. There is mounting evidence that SD proteins also participate in intracellular signaling pathways. The SD protein nephrin serves as a component of a signaling complex that directly links podocyte junctional integrity to actin cytoskeletal dynamics. Another SD protein, CD2-associated protein (CD2AP), is an adaptor molecule involved in podocyte homeostasis that can repress proapoptotic TGF-ss signaling in podocytes. Here we show that dendrin, a protein originally identified in telencephalic dendrites, is a constituent of the SD complex, where it directly binds to nephrin and CD2AP. In experimental glomerulonephritis, dendrin relocates from the SD to the nucleus of injured podocytes. High-dose, proapoptotic TGF-ss 1 directly promotes the nuclear import of dendrin, and nuclear dendrin enhances both staurosporine- and TGF-ss 1-mediated apoptosis. In summary, our results identify dendrin as an SD protein with proapoptotic signaling properties that accumulates in the podocyte nucleus in response to glomerular injury and provides a molecular target to tackle proteinuric kidney diseases. Nuclear relocation of dendrin may provide a mechanism whereby changes in SD integrity could translate into alterations of podocyte survival under pathological conditions.

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