4.7 Article

Serum glomerular permeability activity in patients with podocin mutations (NPHS2) and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages 1946-1952

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/01.ASN.0000016445.29513.AB

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A plasma factor displaying permeability activity in vitro and possibly determining proteinuria has been hypothesized in idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). In vitro permeability activity (P-alb) was determined in sera of five patients with autosomal recessive steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (NPHS2), an inherited condition indistinguishable from idiopathic FSGS oil clinical,rounds, but in which proteinuria is determined by homozygous Mutations of podocin, a key component of the glomerular podocyte. All patients had presented intractable proteinuria with nephrotic syndrome; four developed renal failure and received a renal allograft. For comparison, sera from 31 children with nephrotic syndrome were tested. Pretransplant P-alb was high in all cases (mean 0.81+/-0.06). equivalent to levels observed in idiopathic FSGS. Overall, P-alb did not correlate with proteinuria. The posttransplant outcome was complicated in two patients by recurrence of proteinuria after 10 and 300 d, respectively, that responded to plasmapheresis plus cyclophosphamide. P-alb levels were high at the time of the recurrence episodes and steadily decreased after plasmapheresis, to reach normal levels in the absence of proteinuria after the seventh cycle. In an attempt to explain high P-alb in these patients, putative inhibitors of the permeability activity were Studied. Coincubation of serum with homologous nephrotic urine reduced P-alb to 0, whereas normal urine did not determine any change, which suggests loss of inhibitory substances in nephrotic Urine. The urinary levels of the serum P-alb inhibitors apo J and apo E were negligible in all cases, thus suggesting that other urinary inhibitors were responsible for the neutralizing effect. These data indicate that P-alb is high in NPHS2, probably resulting from loss of inhibitors ill urine. Lack of correlation of P-alb with proteinuria suggests a selective loss of inhibitors. As in idiopathic FSGS, proteinuria may also recur after renal transplantation in NPHS2 patients, and post-transplant proteinuria is associated with high P-alb. The relationship between elevated P-alb and proteinuria in NPHS2 remains to be determined.

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