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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Podocyte as the Target for Aldosterone: Roles of Oxidative Stress and Sgk1

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TLDR
In this article, the effects of aldosterone on podocyte, a key player of the glomerular filtration barrier, were investigated in uninephrectomized rats and fed a high-salt diet, where the podocyte injury was accompanied by renal reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase activation, increased oxidative stress, and enhanced expression of Sgk1.
Abstract
Accumulating evidence suggests that mineralocorticoid receptor blockade effectively reduces proteinuria in hypertensive patients. However, the mechanism of the antiproteinuric effect remains elusive. In this study, we investigated the effects of aldosterone on podocyte, a key player of the glomerular filtration barrier. Uninephrectomized rats were continuously infused with aldosterone and fed a high-salt diet. Aldosterone induced proteinuria progressively, associated with blood pressure elevation. Notably, gene expressions of podocyte-associated molecules nephrin and podocin were markedly decreased in aldosterone-infused rats at 2 weeks, with a gradual decrease thereafter. Immunohistochemical studies and electron microscopy confirmed the podocyte damage. Podocyte injury was accompanied by renal reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase activation, increased oxidative stress, and enhanced expression of aldosterone effector kinase Sgk1. Treatment with eplerenone, a selective aldosterone receptor blocker, almost completely prevented podocyte damage and proteinuria, with normalization of elevated reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase activity. In addition, proteinuria, podocyte damage, and Sgk1 upregulation were significantly alleviated by tempol, a membrane-permeable superoxide dismutase, suggesting the pathogenic role of oxidative stress. Although hydralazine treatment almost normalized blood pressure, it failed to improve proteinuria and podocyte damage. In cultured podocytes with consistent expression of mineralocorticoid receptor, aldosterone stimulated membrane translocation of reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase cytosolic components and oxidative stress generation in podocytes. Furthermore, aldosterone enhanced the expression of Sgk1, which was inhibited by mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist and tempol. In conclusion, podocytes are injured at the early stage in aldosterone-infused rats, resulting in the occurrence of proteinuria. Aldosterone can directly modulate podocyte function, possibly through the induction of oxidative stress and Sgk1.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Nuclear receptors in podocyte biology and glomerular disease.

TL;DR: The authors focus on the roles of nuclear receptors in podocyte biology and non-diabetic glomerular disease as well as their potential as therapeutic targets.
Book ChapterDOI

Role of Aldosterone in Renal Fibrosis.

TL;DR: The important role of ald testosterone in the pathogenesis of renal injury and fibrosis is summarized, emphasizing on its multiple underlying mechanisms and advances in aldosterone research along with the potential therapeutics for targeting MR in a renal fibrosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Connexin 43 is involved in aldosterone-induced podocyte injury.

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence is provided that upregulation of Cx43 expression is involved in Aldo-induced podocyte injury, and that Cx 43 is a potentially relevant therapeutic target for the treatment of chronic kidney diseases (CKD).
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Dexamethasone increases the phosphorylation of nephrin in cultured podocytes

TL;DR: A novel action of glucocorticoid on nephrin phosphorylation through SGK1 is clarified, indicating that glucoc Corticoid treatment for human glomerulonephritis may exert its function by regulating the phosphorylations of nephrine.
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Mineralocorticoid receptor blockade and calcium channel blockade have different renoprotective effects on glomerular and interstitial injury in rats

TL;DR: The combination of eplerenone and amlodipine improved renal injury more effectively than either monotherapy in high salt-fed DS rats, presumably by achieving their own renoprotective effects.
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NAD(P)H Oxidase: Role in Cardiovascular Biology and Disease

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Cell Biology of the Glomerular Podocyte

TL;DR: This review integrates recent physiological and molecular understanding of the role of podocytes during the maintenance and failure of the glomerular filtration barrier with hereditary nephrotic syndromes identified over the last 2 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathophysiology of Progressive Nephropathies

TL;DR: In patients with renal diseases characterized by proteinuria, the initial insult to the kidney is usually followed by a progressive decline in the glomerular filtration rate, which is thought to be due to changes in renal hemodynamics initiated by the loss of nephrons.
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