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Publication : Loss of primary cilia upregulates renal hypertrophic signaling and promotes cystogenesis.

First Author  Bell PD Year  2011
Journal  J Am Soc Nephrol Volume  22
Issue  5 Pages  839-48
PubMed ID  21493775 Mgi Jnum  J:226746
Mgi Id  MGI:5698346 Doi  10.1681/ASN.2010050526
Citation  Bell PD, et al. (2011) Loss of primary cilia upregulates renal hypertrophic signaling and promotes cystogenesis. J Am Soc Nephrol 22(5):839-48
abstractText  Primary cilia dysfunction alters renal tubular cell proliferation and differentiation and associates with accelerated cyst formation in polycystic kidney disease. However, the mechanism leading from primary ciliary dysfunction to renal cyst formation is unknown. We hypothesize that primary cilia prevent renal cyst formation by suppressing pathologic tubular cell hypertrophy and proliferation. Unilateral nephrectomy initiates tubular cell hypertrophy and proliferation in the contralateral kidney and provides a tool to examine primary cilia regulation of renal hypertrophy. Conditional knockout of the primary cilia ift88 gene leads to delayed, adult-onset renal cystic disease, which provides a window of opportunity to conduct unilateral nephrectomy and examine downstream kinetics of renal hypertrophy and cyst formation. In wild-type animals, unilateral nephrectomy activated the mTOR pathway and produced appropriate structural and functional hypertrophy without renal cyst formation. However, in ift88 conditional knockout animals, unilateral nephrectomy triggered increased renal hypertrophy and accelerated renal cyst formation, leading to renal dysfunction. mTOR signaling also increased compared with wild-type animals, suggesting a mechanistic cascade starting with primary ciliary dysfunction, leading to excessive mTOR signaling and renal hypertrophic signaling and culminating in cyst formation. These data suggest that events initiating hypertrophic signaling, such as structural or functional loss of renal mass, may accelerate progression of adult polycystic kidney disease toward end-stage renal disease.
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