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Endogenous adenine mediates kidney injury in diabetic models and predicts diabetic kidney disease in patients

Authors :
Sharma, Kumar
Zhang, Guanshi
Hansen, Jens
Bjornstad, Petter
Lee, Hak Joo
Menon, Rajasree
Hejazi, Leila
Liu, Jian-Jun
Franzone, Anthony
Looker, Helen C.
Choi, Byeong Yeob
Fernandez, Roman
Venkatachalam, Manjeri A.
Kugathasan, Luxcia
Sridhar, Vikas S.
Natarajan, Loki
Zhang, Jing
Sharma, Varun S.
Kwan, Brian
Waikar, Sushrut S.
Himmelfarb, Jonathan
Tuttle, Katherine R.
Kestenbaum, Bryan
Fuhrer, Tobias
Feldman, Harold I.
de Boer, Ian H.
Tucci, Fabio C.
Sedor, John
Heerspink, Hiddo Lambers
Schaub, Jennifer
Otto, Edgar A.
Hodgin, Jeffrey B.
Kretzler, Matthias
Anderton, Christopher R.
Alexandrov, Theodore
Cherney, David
Lim, Su Chi
Nelson, Robert G.
Gelfond, Jonathan
Iyengar, Ravi
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. October 15, 2023, Vol. 133 Issue 20
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) can lead to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and mortality; however, few mechanistic biomarkers are available for high-risk patients, especially those without macroalbuminuria. Urine from participants with diabetes from the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) study, the Singapore Study of Macro-angiopathy and Micro-vascular Reactivity in Type 2 Diabetes (SMART2D), and the American Indian Study determined whether urine adenine/creatinine ratio (UAdCR) could be a mechanistic biomarker for ESKD. ESKD and mortality were associated with the highest UAdCR tertile in the CRIC study and SMART2D. ESKD was associated with the highest UAdCR tertile in patients without macroalbuminuria in the CRIC study, SMART2D, and the American Indian study. Empagliflozin lowered UAdCR in nonmacroalbuminuric participants. Spatial metabolomics localized adenine to kidney pathology, and single-cell transcriptomics identified ribonucleoprotein biogenesis as a top pathway in proximal tubules of patients without macroalbuminuria, implicating mTOR. Adenine stimulated matrix in tubular cells via mTOR and stimulated mTOR in mouse kidneys. A specific inhibitor of adenine production was found to reduce kidney hypertrophy and kidney injury in diabetic mice. We propose that endogenous adenine may be a causative factor in DKD.<br />Introduction Progression to organ failure is marked by fibrosis and loss of architecture in solid organs, such as the kidney. In almost all progressive chronic kidney diseases (CKDs), the features [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
133
Issue :
20
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.770200865
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI170341