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Publication : Prevention and reversal of renal injury by leptin in a new mouse model of diabetic nephropathy.

First Author  Suganami T Year  2005
Journal  FASEB J Volume  19
Issue  1 Pages  127-9
PubMed ID  15496495 Mgi Jnum  J:128255
Mgi Id  MGI:3766555 Doi  10.1096/fj.04-2183fje
Citation  Suganami T, et al. (2005) Prevention and reversal of renal injury by leptin in a new mouse model of diabetic nephropathy. FASEB J 19(1):127-9
abstractText  Diabetic nephropathy is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease, for which effective therapy to prevent the progression at advanced stages remains to be established. There is also a long debate whether diabetic glomerular injury is reversible or not. Lipoatrophic diabetes, a syndrome caused by paucity of adipose tissue, is characterized by severe insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and fatty liver. Here, we show that a genetic model of lipoatrophic diabetes (A-ZIP/F-1 mice) manifests a typical renal injury observed in human diabetic nephropathy that is associated with glomerular hypertrophy, diffuse and pronounced mesangial widening, accumulation of extracellular matrix proteins, podocyte damage, and overt proteinuria. By crossing A-ZIP/F-1 mice with transgenic mice overexpressing an adipocyte-derived hormone leptin, we also reveal that leptin completely prevents the development of hyperglycemia and nephropathy in A-ZIP/F-1 mice. Furthermore, continuous leptin administration to A-ZIP/F-1 mice by minipump beginning at 40 weeks of age significantly alleviates the glomerular injury and proteinuria. These findings demonstrate the therapeutic usefulness of leptin at least for a certain type of diabetic nephropathy. The model presented here will serve as a novel tool to analyze the molecular mechanism underlying not only the progression but also the regression of diabetic nephropathy.
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