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Publication : β-catenin ablation exacerbates polycystic kidney disease progression.

First Author  Conduit SE Year  2019
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  28
Issue  2 Pages  230-244
PubMed ID  30265301 Mgi Jnum  J:268996
Mgi Id  MGI:6272908 Doi  10.1093/hmg/ddy309
Citation  Conduit SE, et al. (2019) beta-catenin ablation exacerbates polycystic kidney disease progression. Hum Mol Genet 28(2):230-244
abstractText  Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) results from excessive renal epithelial cell proliferation, leading to the formation of large fluid filled cysts which impair renal function and frequently lead to renal failure. Hyperactivation of numerous signaling pathways is hypothesized to promote renal epithelial cell hyperproliferation including mTORC1, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and WNT signaling. beta-catenin and its target genes are overexpressed in some PKD models and expression of activated beta-catenin induces cysts in mice; however, beta-catenin murine knockout studies indicate it may also inhibit cystogenesis. Therefore, it remains unclear whether beta-catenin is pro- or anti-cystogenic and whether its role is canonical WNT signaling-dependent. Here, we investigate whether beta-catenin deletion in a PKD model with hyperactived beta-catenin signaling affects disease progression to address whether increased beta-catenin drives PKD. We used renal epithelial cell specific Inpp5e-null PKD mice which we report exhibit increased beta-catenin and target gene expression in the cystic kidneys. Surprisingly, co-deletion of beta-catenin with Inpp5e in renal epithelial cells exacerbated polycystic kidney disease and renal failure compared to Inpp5e deletion alone, but did not normalize beta-catenin target gene expression. beta-catenin/Inpp5e double-knockout kidneys exhibited increased cyst initiation, cell proliferation and MEK/ERK signaling compared to Inpp5e-null, associated with increased fibrosis, which may collectively contribute to accelerated disease. Therefore, increased beta-catenin and WNT target gene expression are not necessarily cyst promoting. Rather beta-catenin may play a dual and context-dependent role in PKD and in the presence of other cyst-inducing mutations (Inpp5e-deletion); beta-catenin loss may exacerbate disease in a WNT target gene-independent manner.
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