Researchers identify new genetic cause for chronic kidney disease July 10, 2012 in Genetics A new single-gene cause of
chronic kidney disease has been discovered that implicates a disease mechanism
not previously believed to be related to the disease, according to new research
from the University
of Michigan . The research was published
July 8 in the
journal Nature Genetics. "In developed countries, the frequency of chronic
kidney disease is continually increasing for unknown reasons. The disease is a
major health burden," says Friedhelm Hildebrandt, M.D., the paper's senior
author and professor of pediatrics and of human genetics at C.S. Mott
Children's Hospital. Using whole exome sequencing, Hildebrandt and his
colleagues studied a model disorder for renal fibrosis, nephronophthisis, and
detected a new single-gene cause of CKD that implicates a disease mechanism
formerly not related to CKD — DNA damage response signaling (DDR). "Since
DNA damage is cause by a whole variety of chemical compounds it may now be
important to see whether certain 'genotoxins' may play a role in the increase
of CKD," says Hildebrandt who is also an investigator for the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute. The researchers identified mutations of Fanconi
anemia-associated nuclease 1 (FAN1) as causing karyomegalic interstitial
nephritis (KIN) in patients with CKD. Depletion of fan1 in a zebrafish model of disease revealed
increased DDR, apoptosis, and kidney cysts akin to nephronophthisis. "Our
findings implicate susceptibility to environmental genotoxins and inadequate
DNA repair as novel mechanisms of renal fibrosis and CKD," Hildebrandt
said. Journal reference: Nature Genetics Provided by University of Michigan Health System
FAN1
mutations cause karyomegalic interstitial nephritis, linking chronic kidney
failure to defective DNA damage repair.
Chronic
kidney disease (CKD) represents a major health burden. Its central feature of
renal fibrosis is not well understood. By exome sequencing, we identified
mutations in FAN1 as a cause of karyomegalic interstitial nephritis (KIN), a
disorder that serves as a model for renal fibrosis. Renal histology in KIN is
indistinguishable from that of nephronophthisis, except for the presence of
karyomegaly. The FAN1 protein has nuclease activity and acts in DNA interstrand
cross-link (ICL) repair within the Fanconi anemia DNA damage response (DDR) pathway.
We show that cells from individuals with FAN1 mutations have sensitivity to the
ICL-inducing agent mitomycin C but do not exhibit chromosome breakage or cell
cycle arrest after diepoxybutane treatment, unlike cells from individuals with
Fanconi anemia. We complemented ICL sensitivity with wild-type FAN1 but not
with cDNA having mutations found in individuals with KIN. Depletion of fan1 in zebrafish caused increased DDR, apoptosis
and kidney cysts. Our findings implicate susceptibility to environmental
genotoxins and inadequate DNA repair as novel mechanisms contributing to renal
fibrosis and CKD.
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