4.7 Article

CHILKBP protects against podocyte injury by preserving ZO-1 expression

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SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-022-04661-z

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Alpha-parvin; Actopaxin; Zonula occludens-1; Tight junction; Kidney diseases

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Glomerular diseases are a major burden on public healthcare and finding therapeutic targets is crucial. CHILKBP, a focal adhesion protein, was found to play a role in maintaining podocyte structure and function. Loss of CHILKBP led to podocyte injury and kidney failure in mice. The interaction between CHILKBP and ZO-1, a junctional protein, was identified as a key pathway in podocyte homeostasis and their decreased expression was observed in patients with proteinuric kidney diseases.
Glomerular diseases afflict millions of people and impose an enormous burden on public healthcare costs worldwide. Identification of potential therapeutic targets for preventing glomerular diseases is of considerable clinical importance. CHILKBP is a focal adhesion protein and modulates a wide array of biological functions. However, little is known about the role of CHILKBP in glomerular diseases. To investigate the function of CHILKBP in maintaining the structure and function of podocytes in a physiologic setting, a mouse model (CHILKBP cKO) was generated in which CHILKBP gene was conditionally deleted in podocytes using the Cre-LoxP system. Ablation of CHILKBP in podocytes resulted in massive proteinuria and kidney failure in mice. Histologically, typical podocyte injury including podocyte loss, foot process effacement, and glomerulosclerosis was observed in CHILKBP cKO mice. Mechanistically, we identified ZO-1 as a key junctional protein that interacted with CHILKBP. Loss of CHILKBP in podocytes exhibited a significant reduction of ZO-1 expression, leading to abnormal actin organization, aberrant slit diaphragm protein expression and compromised podocyte filtration capacity. Restoration of CHILKBP or ZO-1 in CHILKBP-deficient podocytes effectively alleviated podocyte injury induced by the loss of CHILKBP in vitro and in vivo. Finally, we showed the glomerular expression of CHILKBP and ZO-1 was decreased in patients with proteinuric kidney diseases. Our findings reveal a novel signaling pathway consisting of CHILKBP and ZO-1 that plays an essential role in maintaining podocyte homeostasis and suggest novel therapeutic approaches to alleviate glomerular diseases.

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