Complexities of the glomerular basement membrane
TL;DR: How studies of GBM composition and structure have provided insights into GBM assembly, its developmental transitions and its role in glomerular filtration are described, and current and potential future treatments for these disorders are discussed.
read more
Abstract: The glomerular basement membrane (GBM) is a key component of the glomerular capillary wall and is essential for kidney filtration. The major components of the GBM include laminins, type IV collagen, nidogens and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. In addition, the GBM harbours a number of other structural and regulatory components and provides a reservoir for growth factors. New technologies have improved our ability to study the composition and assembly of basement membranes. We now know that the GBM is a complex macromolecular structure that undergoes key transitions during glomerular development. Defects in GBM components are associated with a range of hereditary human diseases such as Alport syndrome, which is caused by defects in the genes COL4A3, COL4A4 and COL4A5, and Pierson syndrome, which is caused by variants in LAMB2. In addition, the GBM is affected by acquired autoimmune disorders and metabolic diseases such as diabetes mellitus. Current treatments for diseases associated with GBM involvement aim to reduce intraglomerular pressure and to treat the underlying cause where possible. As our understanding about the maintenance and turnover of the GBM improves, therapies to replace GBM components or to stimulate GBM repair could translate into new therapies for patients with GBM-associated disease. The glomerular basement membrane (GBM) is essential for kidney filtration. This Review describes how studies of GBM composition and structure have provided insights into GBM assembly, its developmental transitions and its role in glomerular filtration. The authors also discuss GBM-associated diseases and current and potential future treatments for these disorders.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Microenvironmental stiffness mediates cytoskeleton re-organization in chondrocytes through laminin-FAK mechanotransduction
TL;DR: In this article , a new path in cytoskeleton re-organization in chondrocytes in response to changed substrate stiffnesses was elucidated by characterizing the axis shift from the secreted extracellular protein laminin β1, focal adhesion complex protein FAK to microfilament bundling.
The underestimated burden of monogenic kidney disease in adults waitlisted for kidney transplantation
Eva Schrezenmeier,Elisa Kremerskothen,Fabian Halleck,Oliver Staeck,Lutz Liefeldt,Mira Choi,Markus Schüler,Ulrike Weber,Nadine Bachmann,Maik Grohmann,Timo Wagner,Klemens Budde,Carsten Bergmann +12 more
TL;DR: In this article, the kidney transplantation waiting list at the Charite was screened for patients with undetermined cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD) by next-generation sequencing (NGS).
44
Diabetic Proteinuria Revisited: Updated Physiologic Perspectives
Samuel N. Heyman,Itamar Raz,Jamie P. Dwyer,Roni Weinberg Weinberg Sibony,Julia B. Lewis,Zaid Abassi +5 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that the inhibition of the renin–angiotensin axis or of sodium–glucose co-transport likely permits the administration of a normal recommended or even high-protein diet, highly desirable for sarcopenic diabetic patients.
A Clinical Workflow for Cost-Saving High-Rate Diagnosis of Genetic Kidney Diseases
FungoSem,شيماء كامل +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors developed a workflow based on referral criteria for in-person evaluation at a tertiary center, whole-exome sequencing, reverse phenotyping, and multidisciplinary board analysis.
28
Kidney organoids recapitulate human basement membrane assembly in health and disease
TL;DR: In this paper , the dynamics of BM assembly in human pluripotent stem cell-derived kidney organoids were investigated and a conserved temporal sequence in BM assembly was found that paralleled mammalian fetal kidneys.
28
References
Positionally Cloned Gene for a Novel Glomerular Protein—Nephrin—Is Mutated in Congenital Nephrotic Syndrome
Marjo Kestilä,Ulla Lenkkeri,Minna Männikkö,Jane Lamerdin,Paula McCready,Heli Putaala,Vesa Ruotsalainen,Takako Morita,Marja Nissinen,Riitta Herva,Clifford E. Kashtan,Leena Peltonen,Christer Holmberg,Anne S. Olsen,Karl Tryggvason,Karl Tryggvason +15 more
TL;DR: A crucial role for this protein in the development or function of the kidney filtration barrier is demonstrated and by Northern and in situ hybridization was shown to be specifically expressed in renal glomeruli.
1.8K
Pathologic Classification of Diabetic Nephropathy
Thijs W. Cohen Tervaert,Antien L. Mooyaart,Kerstin Amann,Arthur H. Cohen,H. Terence Cook,Cinthia B. Drachenberg,Franco Ferrario,Agnes B. Fogo,Mark Haas,Emile de Heer,Kensuke Joh,Laure Hélène Noël,Jai Radhakrishnan,Surya V. Seshan,Ingeborg M. Bajema,Jan A. Bruijn +15 more
TL;DR: A consensus classification combining type1 and type 2 diabetic nephropathies is developed that would be easy to use internationally in clinical practice and a good interobserver reproducibility for the four classes of DN was shown.
1.4K
Genetics of diabetes mellitus and diabetes complications.
TL;DR: Advances in genomic analysis are described that have enabled novel genetic discoveries, more than doubled the number of genetic loci associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus and uncovered several novel candidate genes for diabetes complications.
1.2K
Overview of the Matrisome—An Inventory of Extracellular Matrix Constituents and Functions
Richard O. Hynes,Alexandra Naba +1 more
TL;DR: The evolution of ECM proteins was key in the transition to multicellularity, the arrangement of cells into tissue layers, and the elaboration of novel structures during vertebrate evolution, and this key role is reflected in the diversity ofECM proteins and the modular domain structures.
The Matrisome: In Silico Definition and In Vivo Characterization by Proteomics of Normal and Tumor Extracellular Matrices
Alexandra Naba,Karl R. Clauser,Sebastian Hoersch,Sebastian Hoersch,Hui Liu,Steven A. Carr,Richard O. Hynes +6 more
TL;DR: A proteomic strategy developed to characterize the in vivo ECM composition of normal tissues and tumors using enrichment of protein extracts for ECM components and subsequent analysis by mass spectrometry and a bioinformatic approach to predict the in silico “matrisome” defined as the ensemble of ECM proteins and associated factors are presented.
1.1K
Related Papers (5)
Emily E. Groopman,Maddalena Marasa,Sophia R. Cameron-Christie,Slavé Petrovski,Vimla Aggarwal,Hila Milo-Rasouly,Yifu Li,Junying Zhang,Jordan G. Nestor,Priya Krithivasan,Wan Yee Lam,Adele Mitrotti,Stacy Piva,Byum Hee Kil,Debanjana Chatterjee,Rachel Reingold,Drew Bradbury,Michael DiVecchia,Holly J. Snyder,Xueru Mu,Karla Mehl,Olivia Balderes,David Fasel,Chunhua Weng,Jai Radhakrishnan,Pietro A. Canetta,Gerald B. Appel,Andrew S. Bomback,Wooin Ahn,Natalie S Uy,Shumyle Alam,David J. Cohen,Russell J. Crew,Geoffrey K. Dube,Maya K. Rao,Sitharthan Kamalakaran,Brett Copeland,Zhong Ren,Joshua Bridgers,Colin D. Malone,Caroline Mebane,Neha Dagaonkar,Bengt Fellström,Carolina Haefliger,Sumit Mohan,Simone Sanna-Cherchi,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Jan Fleckner,Ruth March,Adam Platt,David Goldstein,Ali G. Gharavi +51 more
