Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences (Jul 2021)
Podocentric view of glomerular proteinuria: Focused on cytoskeletal changes and toward promising targeted therapies and challenges
Abstract
Abstract Among renal cells, podocytes (glomerular epithelial cells) are the most critical to prevent plasma proteins from excessive loss by forming their sophisticated foot processes (FP) and slit diaphragms (SD). A general finding in the glomeruli of patients with nephrotic syndrome is the foot processes “effacement” resulted from dysregulated actin cytoskeleton reorganization. Ultrastructural analysis in patients with nephrotic syndrome has demonstrated that such changes tend to be dynamic and can sometimes be reversible. In a more molecular sense, injured podocytes can no longer maintain their tight regulation and “retract” their FP, but not “efface” them. Past studies have revealed multiple exquisite mechanisms and arrays of proteins participating in the regulation of cytoskeletal rearrangement, and these mechanisms serve as potential targets to treat. A major challenge to develop specific therapies is the targeted mechanism has to be crucial and specific enough for podocyte‐oriented kidney diseases, and it would be even better to manifest in most of the glomerulonephritis. Studies have shown many approaches targeting different mechanisms, but none of them has been proved to be effective in clinical medicine. Up to the present, Abatacept (Orencia) is the first (and the only) clinical targeted therapy demonstrating limited success. It inhibits the co‐stimulatory response of B7‐1 (CD80) induced in various types of glomerulonephritis. Future clinical studies have to be expanded to substantiate this highly specific targeted therapy because the Abatacept effect is not generally accepted even within the nephrology community. Nevertheless, there are ongoing searches for specific treatment targeting podocytes through various approaches.
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