Prorenin receptor is essential for podocyte autophagy and survival

  • Fabian Riediger
  • Ivo Quack
  • Fatimunnisa Qadri
  • Björn Hartleben
  • Joon-Keun Park
  • Sebastian A Potthoff
  • Dennis Sohn
  • Gabin Sihn
  • Anthony Rousselle
  • Verena Fokuhl
  • Ulrike Maschke
  • Bettina Purfürst
  • Wolfgang Schneider
  • Lars C Rump
  • Friedrich C Luft
  • Ralf Dechend
  • Michael Bader
  • Tobias B Huber
  • Genevieve Nguyen
  • Dominik N Muller

Abstract

The prorenin receptor (PRR) is highly expressed in podocytes, but its role in the maintenance of podocyte function is unknown. Here we generated podocyte-specific PRR-knockout mice and found that these animals died between 2 to 3 wk after birth. Within 14 d, PRR-knockout mice developed nephrotic syndrome, albuminuria with podocyte foot-process fusion, and cytoskeletal changes. Podocyte-specific PRR deletion also led to disturbed processing of multivesicular bodies and enrichment of autophagosomal (LC3) and lysosomal (LAMP2) markers, indicating a functional block in autophagosome-lysosome fusion and an overload of the proteasomal protein-degradation machinery. In vitro, PRR knockdown and pharmacologic blockade of vacuolar H(+)-ATPases, which associate with the PRR, increased vesicular pH, led to accumulation of LC3-positive and LAMP2-positive vesicles and altered the cytoskeleton. Taken together, these results suggest that the PRR is essential for podocyte function and survival by maintaining autophagy and protein-turnover machinery. Furthermore, PRR contributes to the control of lysosomal pH, which is important for podocyte survival and cytoskeletal integrity.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1046-6673
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 12.2011
PubMed 22034640