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Glucocorticoid- and pioglitazone-induced proteinuria reduction in experimental NS both correlate with glomerular ECM modulation

  • Sagar Bhayana
  • , Julie A. Dougherty
  • , Yu Kamigaki
  • , Shipra Agrawal
  • , Saranga Wijeratne
  • , James Fitch
  • , Amanda P. Waller
  • , Katelyn J. Wolfgang
  • , Peter White
  • , Bryce A. Kerlin
  • , William E. Smoyer
  • Nationwide Children’s Hospital
  • Ohio State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (NS) is a common glomerular disease. Although glucocorticoids (GC) are the primary treatment, the PPARγ agonist pioglitazone (Pio) also reduces proteinuria in patients with NS and directly protects podocytes from injury. Because both drugs reduce proteinuria, we hypothesized these effects result from overlapping transcriptional patterns. Systems biology approaches compared glomerular transcriptomes from rats with PAN-induced NS treated with GC vs. Pio and identified 29 commonly regulated genes-of-interest, primarily involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling. Correlation with clinical idiopathic NS patient datasets confirmed glomerular ECM dysregulation as a potential mechanism of injury. Cellular deconvolution in silico revealed GC- and Pio-induced amelioration of altered genes primarily within podocytes and mesangial cells. While validation studies are indicated, these analyses identified molecular pathways involved in the early stages of NS (prior to scarring), suggesting that targeting glomerular ECM dysregulation may enable a future non-immunosuppressive approach for proteinuria reduction in idiopathic NS.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108631
JournaliScience
Volume27
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 19 2024

Keywords

  • Gene network
  • Nephrology
  • Systems biology
  • Transcriptomics

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