Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
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J Am Soc Nephrol 17: 1757-1758, 2006
© 2006 American Society of Nephrology
doi: 10.1681/ASN.2006050509

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This Month’s Highlights


    Na,K-ATPase—A New Role for an Old Protein.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 1
Maintenance of an electrochemical gradient from the extracellular to the intracellular milieu is essential for normal cellular function and is ultimately dependent upon the ubiquitous Na,K-ATPase. In addition to its pump function, recent studies have indicated that Na,K-ATPase also transduces signals and specifically activates NF-{kappa}B via IP3 receptors, which interact with the Na,K-ATPase cytoplasmic tail. In this issue of JASN, Li et al. demonstrate that low concentrations of ouabain, which do not inhibit the pump function, will activate the signaling activity of Na,K-ATPase and that the resultant NF-{kappa}B activation prevents apoptosis in response to serum deprivation. Therefore, these studies serve to highlight a potentially important function for Na,K-ATPase separate from its transport functions and raise the possibility that endogenous ouabain-like compounds might play a role in cell growth and development. See Li et al., pages 1848–1857.


    Yet Another Nonhemodynamic Effect of RAS Blockade That May Relate to Progression.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 2
The work by Liang et al. in this issue of JASN addresses three very topical issues in one study: the role of podocytes in progression, the ability of different glomerular cell types to talk to each other, and the mechanisms by which blockade of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) slows progression. Working with cells in culture, Liang et al. show that normal podocytes support endothelial cell growth and sprouting (and hence capillary remodeling and repair) through vascular EGF (VEGF) and angiopoeitin I–dependent mechanisms, that injured podocytes lose this ability as they downregulate VEGF and angiopoeitin I (thus inhibiting remodeling and accelerating progression), and that this loss of VEGF and angiopoeitin I effect can be reversed by angiotensin receptor blockade. It is, of course, a long way from the culture plate to people, but if the same phenomena can be shown to occur in vivo, these observations would provide important new insights of potential therapeutic significance in chronic kidney disease. See Liang et al., pages 1886–1895.


    RPGN: Is It the ANCA Antibody, or Is It the T Cells—or Could It Be Both?
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 3
The role of humoral (antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies [ANCA]) versus cell-mediated immune mechanisms in ANCA-positive crescentic glomerular nephritis (GN) has been controversial for years. These authors from Melbourne have been the leading proponents of cellular mechanisms independent of antibody in producing crescentic GN. However, this study suggests a need for compromise! Ruth et al. provide evidence in mice for a two-step process in which ANCA leads first to glomerular neutrophil recruitment, and release and localization of MPO antigen in capillaries, followed by injury resulting from the interaction of T cells rather than antibody with the planted myeloperoxidase antigen, resulting in crescentic GN without immune deposits. These observations, of course, were made in manipulated mouse models. However, they do provide proof of concept, and if similar events occur in humans they could unify these currently conflicting hypotheses of the mechanisms underlying ANCA-positive GN into one concept of the pathogenesis of the disease. See Ruth et al., pages 1940–1949.


    Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and Acute Renal Failure.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 4
Acute renal failure (ARF) due to ischemic injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Interestingly, previous ischemia conditions the kidney to make it more resistant to repeated ischemic injury. However, for obvious reasons, this insight does not lend itself to therapeutic application. In elegant studies by Bernhardt et al., the authors exploit this previous observation and induce the specific protective factor upregulated by previous ischemia, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF), by preventing its degradation with a novel inhibitor of HIF prolyl hydroxylase, FG 4487. Preconditioning with FG4487 augmented HIF expression and protected kidneys from subsequent hypoxic injury with decreased renal dysfunction and morphologic injury. These exciting results indicate that such approaches could have clinical relevance in protecting from ischemia-induced ARF. See Bernhardt et al., pages 1970–1978.


    More on Complement Regulatory Proteins and Atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 5
A major advance in the past several years in understanding the pathogenesis of non–shigatoxin-induced, or "atypical," hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is the discovery that many of these patients exhibit inherited or acquired deficiencies or mutations in proteins that regulate complement activation and thereby complement-mediated attack on endothelial cells. Particularly common are circulating factor H and cell-bound membrane co-factor protein (MCP) abnormalities. This study extends those observations by documenting MCP mutations in 10% of patients with atypical HUS and showing that most of these patients do not develop ESRD clinically. Moreover, in contrast to patients with circulating factor H deficiencies, they do not have a high risk for recurrence in transplants. Understanding of the different types of complement regulatory disorders involved in the pathogenesis of HUS and how they differ clinically now offers opportunities for screening and potential new therapies for these patients that may lead to considerable improvement in their management and prognosis. See Fremeaux-Bacchi et al., pages 2017–2025.


    Chronic Kidney Disease Is Risky Business.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 6
It is generally understood that chronic kidney disease increases an individual’s risk of death, and that most persons with impaired kidney function will die before reaching ESRD. The systematic review of this problem by Tonelli and his colleagues in this issue of JASN draws attention to just how important this association is. They abstracted data from 39 studies involving more than 1.3 million individuals to assess the impact of impaired kidney function on subsequent survival. They found, as expected, an increased risk of death among individuals with kidney disease. However, the risk increased exponentially, not in a linear fashion, and was greater among younger individuals and in studies with lower baseline prevalence of cardiovascular disease, and these associations persisted after controlling for other risk factors. These unique findings and the unexpected nature of the populations at greatest risk are worth noting and should amplify the message to clinicians that a properly interpreted serum creatinine is an extremely powerful risk stratification tool. See Tonelli et al., pages 2034–2047.


    Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts Mortality Risk.
 Top
 Na,K-ATPase--A New Role for...
 Yet Another Nonhemodynamic...
 RPGN: Is It the...
 Hypoxia-Inducible Factor and...
 More on Complement Regulatory...
 Chronic Kidney Disease Is...
 Renal Artery Stenosis Predicts...
 

Figure 7
The role of renal artery disease in outcomes of kidney disease remains uncertain. There is clear evidence that renal artery stenosis is associated with hypertension, increased risk of impaired kidney function, progression of kidney disease, and death. Mui and associates provide further evidence that renal artery stenosis complicating peripheral vascular disease is associated with increased prevalence of kidney disease and is an independent predictor of mortality in these patients. Beyond the prognostic information, however, the clinical implications of incidentally discovered renal artery stenosis are uncertain, and evidence regarding the utility of revascularization for control of hypertension and renoprotection is incomplete. The high prevalence of renal artery disease in patients with peripheral vascular disease with a mean systolic blood pressure of 153 mmHg reported by Mui et al. clearly suggests that this population might yield volunteers for well-designed clinical studies comparing optimal medical therapy alone to stenting with optimal medical therapy, such as the ongoing Cardiovascular Outcomes in Renal Atherosclerotic Lesions (CORAL) study (http://www.coralclinicaltrial.org/). See Mui et al., pages 2069–2074.


Related Articles

Angiotensin Type 1 Receptor Blocker Restores Podocyte Potential to Promote Glomerular Endothelial Cell Growth
Xiu-Bin Liang, Li-Jun Ma, Takashi Naito, Yihan Wang, Michael Madaio, Roy Zent, Ambra Pozzi, and Agnes B. Fogo
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 1886-1895. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Incidental Renal Artery Stenosis Is an Independent Predictor of Mortality in Patients with Peripheral Vascular Disease
Kwok-Wai Mui, Mengalvio Sleeswijk, Huib van den Hout, Jef van Baal, Gerjan Navis, and Arend-Jan Woittiez
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 2069-2074. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Low Doses of Ouabain Protect from Serum Deprivation–Triggered Apoptosis and Stimulate Kidney Cell Proliferation via Activation of NF-{kappa}B
Juan Li, Sergey Zelenin, Anita Aperia, and Oleg Aizman
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 1848-1857. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Genetic and Functional Analyses of Membrane Cofactor Protein (CD46) Mutations in Atypical Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome
Véronique Fremeaux-Bacchi, Elizabeth A. Moulton, David Kavanagh, Marie-Agnès Dragon-Durey, Jacques Blouin, Amy Caudy, Nadia Arzouk, Roxanna Cleper, Maud Francois, Genevieve Guest, Jacques Pourrat, Roland Seligman, Wolf Herman Fridman, Chantal Loirat, and John P. Atkinson
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 2017-2025. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Chronic Kidney Disease and Mortality Risk: A Systematic Review
Marcello Tonelli, Natasha Wiebe, Bruce Culleton, Andrew House, Chris Rabbat, Mei Fok, Finlay McAlister, and Amit X. Garg
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 2034-2047. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Preconditional Activation of Hypoxia-Inducible Factors Ameliorates Ischemic Acute Renal Failure
Wanja M. Bernhardt, Valentina Câmpean, Sarah Kany, Jan-Steffen Jürgensen, Alexander Weidemann, Christina Warnecke, Michael Arend, Stephen Klaus, Volkmar Günzler, Kerstin Amann, Carsten Willam, Michael S. Wiesener, and Kai-Uwe Eckardt
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 1970-1978. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies and Effector CD4+ Cells Play Nonredundant Roles in Anti-Myeloperoxidase Crescentic Glomerulonephritis
Amanda-Jane Ruth, A. Richard Kitching, Rain Y.Q. Kwan, Dragana Odobasic, Joshua D.K. Ooi, Jennifer R. Timoshanko, Michael J. Hickey, and Stephen R. Holdsworth
J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. 2006 17: 1940-1949. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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