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Advillin acts upstream of phospholipase C ?1 in steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

Authors :
Amelie T. van der Ven
Weizhen Tan
Heon Yung Gee
Mohan Shenoy
Mohamad Aman Jairajpuri
Won-Il Choi
Tobias Hermle
Krisztina Fehér
Ankana Daga
Yincent Tse
Richard P. Lifton
Martin Bald
Friedhelm Hildebrandt
Sherif El Desoky
Seema Khurana
Shirlee Shril
Afig Berdeli
Svjetlana Lovric
Arvind Bagga
Jameela A. Kari
David Schapiro
Daniela A. Braun
Johanna Magdalena Schmidt
Sevgi Mir
Neveen A. Soliman
José C. Martins
Shrikant Mane
Jia Rao
Udo Helmchen
Ronen Schneider
Eugen Widmeier
Tilman Jobst-Schwan
Sudeep P. George
Jillian K. Warejko
Ahmet Nayir
Amin Esmaeilniakooshkghazi
Shazia Ashraf
Ege Üniversitesi
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2017.

Abstract

PubMed ID: 29058690<br />Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) is a frequent cause of chronic kidney disease. Here, we identified recessive mutations in the gene encoding the actin-binding protein advillin (AVIL) in 3 unrelated families with SRNS. While all AVIL mutations resulted in a marked loss of its actin-bundling ability, truncation of AVIL also disrupted colocalization with F-actin, thereby leading to impaired actin binding and severing. Additionally, AVIL colocalized and interacted with the phospholipase enzyme PLCE1 and with the ARP2/3 actin-modulating complex. Knockdown of AVIL in human podocytes reduced actin stress fibers at the cell periphery, prevented recruitment of PLCE1 to the ARP3-rich lamellipodia, blocked EGF-induced generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) by PLCE1, and attenuated the podocyte migration rate (PMR). These effects were reversed by overexpression of WT AVIL but not by overexpression of any of the 3 patient-derived AVIL mutants. The PMR was increased by overexpression of WT Avil or PLCE1, or by EGF stimulation; however, this increased PMR was ameliorated by inhibition of the ARP2/3 complex, indicating that ARP-dependent lamellipodia formation occurs downstream of AVIL and PLCE1 function. Together, these results delineate a comprehensive pathogenic axis of SRNS that integrates loss of AVIL function with alterations in the action of PLCE1, an established SRNS protein.<br />VE 196/1-1, HE 7456/1-1, Jo 1324/1-1 U.S. Public Health Service: DK-56338 National Institutes of Health: DK076683 National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases: DK-98120 National Research Foundation of Korea, NRF: 2015R1D1A1A01056685 Department of Science and Technology, Government of Kerala NAS LPDS-2015-07 Fudan University<br />We are grateful to the families and study participants for their contributions. We thank the Yale Center for Mendelian Genomics (U54HG006504) for WES analysis. FH is a William E. Harmon Professor of Pediatrics. This research was supported by the NIH (DK076683, to FH); the Young Scholars Program of Children’s Hospital of Fudan University (to JR); Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea 2015R1D1A1A01056685 (to HYG); DFG fellowships (VE 196/1-1, to ATvdV; Jo 1324/1-1, to TJS; and HE 7456/1-1, to TH); the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (LPDS-2015-07, to EW); the Egyptian Group for Orphan Renal Diseases (EGORD) (to NAS); the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India (DST-SERB, to MAJ); the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (DK-98120, to SK); and the Public Health Service (DK-56338, to SK).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a4cc52790ea4c21e7da32f81683af4e