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

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      Differentiation-induced cultured podocytes express endocytically active megalin, a heymann nephritis antigen.

      Nephron. Experimental Nephrology
      Animals, Cell Differentiation, Cell Line, Endocytosis, Gene Expression, Kidney Glomerulus, cytology, metabolism, Ligands, Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Related Protein-2, genetics, Mice

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          Abstract

          Megalin is a multiligand endocytic receptor expressed in a number of epithelia. In the Lewis rat kidney, podocytes, as well as proximal tubule cells, express megalin that acts as a pathogenic antigen for Heymann nephritis (HN), an experimental model of membranous nephropathy. To obtain a tool to investigate the molecular mechanisms of megalin-mediated endocytosis and the pathogenesis of HN, we examined whether a differentiation-inducible mouse podocyte cell line expressed endocytically active megalin. Immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation analyses with an anti-rat megalin antibody were carried out to investigate whether megalin was expressed in the differentiated and undifferentiated podocytes. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis was performed to elucidate whether the cells synthesize megalin mRNA. 125I-labeled receptor-associated protein (RAP), an endocytic ligand for megalin, was used for cellular internalization and degradation assays. Immunofluorescence, immunoprecipitation and RT-PCR analyses revealed that megalin was synthesized in both differentiated and undifferentiated cells and localized to the cell surfaces. Effective endocytosis of RAP via megalin was shown under the differentiated condition. Endocytically active megalin is expressed in differentiation-induced cultured podocytes. This cell line could be a useful tool for studies on megalin-mediated endocytosis and the pathogenesis of HN. Copyright 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

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          An endocytic pathway essential for renal uptake and activation of the steroid 25-(OH) vitamin D3.

          Steroid hormones may enter cells by diffusion through the plasma membrane. However, we demonstrate here that some steroid hormones are taken up by receptor-mediated endocytosis of steroid-carrier complexes. We show that 25-(OH) vitamin D3 in complex with its plasma carrier, the vitamin D-binding protein, is filtered through the glomerulus and reabsorbed in the proximal tubules by the endocytic receptor megalin. Endocytosis is required to preserve 25-(OH) vitamin D3 and to deliver to the cells the precursor for generation of 1,25-(OH)2 vitamin D3, a regulator of the calcium metabolism. Megalin-/- mice are unable to retrieve the steroid from the glomerular filtrate and develop vitamin D deficiency and bone disease.
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            Immunocytochemical localization of the Heymann nephritis antigen (GP330) in glomerular epithelial cells of normal Lewis rats

            The nephritogenic antigen of Heymann's nephritis (HN) was previously purified from tubular brush-border fractions of rat kidney and found to be a 330,000- mol-wt glycoprotein (gp330). This study was conducted to determine whether gp330 is also present in the rat glomerulus, and, if so, to establish where in the glomerulus it is located. Rabbit polyclonal and mouse monoclonal antibodies were raised against purified gp330, which specifically immunoprecipitated gp330 from solubilized brush-border fractions and specifically stained microvilli and coated invaginations (located at the base of the microvilli) of proximal tubule cells. Accordingly, they were used to localize gp330 by immunoprecipitation and immunocytochemistry in glomeruli of normal Lewis rats. For immunoprecipitation, purified glomerular fractions were prepared from [(35)S]-methionine-labeled kidneys, extracted with Triton X-100, and the extract was used for immunoprecipitation with affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal, or mouse monoclonal, anti-gp330 IgG. Analysis of immunoprecipitates by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis fluorography indicated that a band corresponding in mobility to gp330 was specifically precipitated. When unfixed cryostat sections were incubated for indirect immunofluorescence with monoclonal or affinity-purified polyclonal IgG, a fine granular fluorescent staining was seen throughout the glomerulus. When aldehyde-fixed cryostat sections were incubated for indirect immunoperoxidase, reaction product was detected only in the epithelial cells and was not seen in the GBM, endothelium, or mesangium. Within the epithelium it was localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, occasional Golgi elements, multivesicular bodies, and coated pits at the cell surface. The reactive coated pits were distributed all along the cell membrane, including the sides and base of the foot processes. Reaction product was detected in the latter location only in sections that had been digested with neuraminidase before antibody incubation. When rats were given rabbit anti-gp330 IgG by intravenous injection and their kidneys stained for direct immunoperoxidase 3 d later, rabbit IgG was seen to be deposited beneath the slit diaphragms and in the coated pits at the base of the foot processes. The immunocytochemical and immunoprecipitation data indicate, in confirmation of the results of others, that the nephritogenic HN antigen is present in renal glomeruli as well as in proximal tubular brush borders. The immunocytochemical results further demonstrate that gp330 is an epithelial, rather than a glomerular basement membrane, antigen. It appears to be synthesized by glomerular epithelial cells and subsequently becomes concentrated in coated pits. As both the endogenous antigen (gp330) and exogenously administered anti-gp330 antibody were localized to coated pits, it seems likely that coated pits located at the base of the foot processes are the sites where the HN antigen (gp330) and circulating antibodies directed against gp330 meet and where immune complexes are formed.
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              LDL receptor relatives at the crossroad of endocytosis and signaling.

              For many years, the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor and the LDL receptor-related protein (LRP) have been considered to be prototypes of cargo receptors which deliver, via endocytosis, macromolecules into cells. However, the recent identification of additional members of this gene family and examination of their biology has revealed that at least some of these proteins are also signaling receptors. Very low density lipoprotein receptor and ApoER2 transmit the extracellular reelin signal into migrating neurons, and thus are key components of the reelin pathway which governs neuronal layering of the forebrain during embryonic brain development. LRP5 and LRP6 are integral components of the Wnt signaling pathway which is central to many processes of metazoan development, cell proliferation, and tumor formation. Adaptor proteins interacting with the cytosolic domains of these receptors might orchestrate their ability to deliver their cargo or a signal.
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