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      Call for Papers: Green Renal Replacement Therapy: Caring for the Environment

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      Urinary type IV collagen in nondiabetic kidney disease.

      Nephron. Clinical practice
      Adolescent, Biological Markers, urine, Child, Collagen Type IV, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Complications, epidemiology, Female, Humans, Japan, Kidney Diseases, Male, Prevalence, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          Type IV collagen is one of the major components of basement membrane. In diabetic nephropathy, it is already known that urinary excretion of type IV collagen increases with the disease progression. However, in nondiabetic kidney disease, urinary type IV collagen (u-IVc) levels have not been extensively investigated. The aim of this study was to evaluate u-IVc levels in various nephropathies except diabetic nephropathy. u-IVc levels were measured cross-sectionally from 527 biopsy-proven nondiabetic renal disease patients at tertiary care hospitals by one-step sandwich enzyme immunoassay. On simple regression analyses, u-IVc levels had positive correlation with age, blood pressure, urinary protein (u-Prot), urinary β(2) microglobulin, urinary N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase, HbA(1)c, and selectivity index (SI), while u-IVc had negative correlation with eGFR and serum albumin. Multiple regression analyses revealed that u-IVc was positively correlated with u-Prot, HbA(1)c and SI. Among biopsy-proven nondiabetic nephropathies, elevation of u-IVc was distinctively observed in membranous nephropathy and anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated glomerulonephritis. u-IVc levels were elevated with the increase in u-Prot, HbA(1)c and SI. In addition, among nondiabetic kidney disease, elevation of u-IVc was observed in patients with membranous nephropathy and ANCA, which might reflect the thickening of basement membrane or severe kidney damage. Copyright © 2010 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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          Most cited references18

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          Renal basement membrane components.

          Renal basement membrane components. Basement membranes are specialized extracellular matrices found throughout the body. They surround all epithelia, endothelia, peripheral nerves, muscle cells, and fat cells. They play particularly important roles in the kidney, as demonstrated by the fact that defects in renal basement membranes are associated with kidney malfunction. The major components of all basement membranes are laminin, collagen IV, entactin/nidogen, and sulfated proteoglycans. Each of these describes a family of related proteins that assemble with each other in the extracellular space to form the basement membrane. Over the last few years, new basement membrane components that are expressed in the kidney have been discovered. Here, the major components and their localization in mature and developing renal basement membranes are described. In addition, the phenotypes of basement membrane component gene mutations, both naturally occurring and experimental, are discussed, as is the aberrant deposition of basement membrane proteins in the extracellular matrix in several renal diseases.
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            The molecular basis of Goodpasture and Alport syndromes: beacons for the discovery of the collagen IV family.

            Jo Hudson (2004)
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              Role of distinct type IV collagen networks in glomerular development and function.

              In X-linked Alport syndrome, mutations in the COL4A5 gene encoding the alpha 5 chain of type IV collagen result in progressive renal failure. This nephropathy appears to relate to the arrest of a switch from an alpha 1/alpha 2 to an alpha 3/alpha 4/alpha 5 network of type IV collagen in the developing glomerular basement membrane (GBM; Kalluri et al, J Clin Invest 99:2470, 1997).
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