Summary Background and objectives We assessed the activation of the oxidative stress pathway in patients with IgA nephropathy (IgAN), while evaluating the classic marker of the disease (galactose-deficient serum IgA1). Design, setting, participants, & measurements Sera from 292 patients and 69 healthy controls from Italy and the United States were assayed for advanced oxidation protein products (AOPPs), free sulfhydryl groups on albumin (SH-Alb), and IgA1 with galactose-deficient hinge-region O-glycans (Gd-IgA1). Gd-IgA1 was detected by binding to Helix aspersa agglutinin (HAA) and expressed as total Gd-IgA1 or as degree of galactose deficiency relative to a standard Gd-IgA1 myeloma protein (%HAA). Results Sera from IgAN patients showed higher levels of Gd-IgA1, %HAA, and AOPPs, but lower levels of SH-Alb in comparison to that from healthy controls. Serum levels of AOPPs significantly correlated with serum Gd-IgA1 and %HAA. The relationship between these biomarkers and clinical features at sampling and during follow-up was assessed in 62 patients with long-term follow-up. AOPPs and %HAA correlated with proteinuria at sampling and independently associated with subsequent proteinuria. Levels of AOPPs correlated with rate of decline in renal function after sampling. The combination of a high level of AOPPs and a high level of %HAA associated with decline in estimated GFR. Conclusions Serum levels of aberrantly glycosylated IgA1 are elevated and oxidative stress pathways are activated in patients with IgAN; the intensity of the stress correlated with expression and progression of the disease. We speculate that oxidative stress may modulate the nephrotoxicity of aberrantly glycosylated IgA1 in IgAN.
SummaryWe investigated Toll-like receptors (TLR-3, -4 and -7) expression in circulating mononuclear cells of patients with immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN), a disease with debated relationships with mucosal immunity. TLR-4 expression (detected by fluorescence activated cell sorter) and mRNA transcriptional levels (Taqman) were significantly higher in patients with IgAN than in healthy controls (P = 0·00200 and P = 0·0200). TLR-3 and TLR-7 were not modified significantly. In IgAN patients proteinuria was correlated significantly with TLR-4 expression (P = 0·0312). In a group of nephrotic syndromes, TLR-3, -4 and -7 expression was similar to healthy controls. A significant difference in TLR-4 expression and mRNA levels was found between very active IgAN patients (proteinuria > 1 g/1·73 m 2 /day in association with severe microscopic haematuria) and inactive patients (proteinuria < 0·5 g/1·73 m 2 /day, with absent or minimal haematuria). No correlation with levels of aberrantly glycosylated IgA1, age, renal biopsy features or therapy was found. This study shows for the first time an up-regulation of TLR-4 in circulating mononuclear cells of patients with IgAN, particularly in association with proteinuria and heavy microscopic haematuria.
Children with HSP and pIgAN present with similar signs of engagement of the innate immunity and regulatory T cell depression. The increased immunoproteasome switch, which correlated with TLR2 activation, may suggest an innate immunity pathway peculiar to HSP vasculitic presentation. This research area also deserves further investigation for possible therapeutic applications.
The reaction of mesangial cells with aberrantly glycosylated IgA1 has been implicated in the etiology of IgA nephropathy (IgAN). Tumor necrosis factor, which is assumed to mediate the interaction between mesangial cells and podocytes, also induces the expression of platelet-activating factor (PAF). In this study, we determined whether PAF affects the expression of nephrin (an adhesion molecule critical to glomerular permselectivity) and cytoskeletal F-actin organization in podocytes. We treated human mesangial cells with atypically glycosylated IgA1 either prepared in vitro or derived from the sera of patients with IgAN. We then prepared conditioned media from these cells and added them to cultured human podocytes in the presence of PAF receptor antagonists. Podocytes transfected to overexpress acetylhydrolase, the main catabolic enzyme of PAF, served as controls. Downregulation of nephrin expression and F-actin reorganization occurred when podocytes were cultured with mesangial cell-conditioned medium. Preincubation of podocytes with a PAF receptor antagonist prevented the loss and redistribution of nephrin. In control podocytes overexpressing acetylhydrolase, nephrin loss was abrogated. Our results suggest that atypically glycosylated IgA-induced PAF from mesangial cells is a mediator of podocyte changes, which, when more directly tested elsewhere, were found to be associated with proteinuria. Hence, it is possible that these in vitro findings may be relevant to the proteinuria of IgAN.
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