Specific Antagonism of PDGF Prevents Renal Scarring in Experimental Glomerulonephritis
Author(s) -
Tammo Ostendorf,
Uta Kunter,
Hermann Joseph Gröne,
Ferdinand H. Bahlmann,
Hiroshi Kawachi,
Fujio Shimizu,
Karl Koch,
Nebojša Janjić,
Jürgen Floege
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of the american society of nephrology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.451
H-Index - 279
eISSN - 1533-3450
pISSN - 1046-6673
DOI - 10.1681/asn.v125909
Subject(s) - podocyte , glomerulosclerosis , platelet derived growth factor receptor , medicine , pathogenesis , renal function , glomerulonephritis , endocrinology , supar , platelet derived growth factor , growth factor , kidney , proteinuria , receptor , urokinase receptor
. Glomerular mesangial cell proliferation and/or mesangial matrix accumulation characterizes many progressive renal diseases. Rats with progressive mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis were treated from day 3 to day 7 after disease induction with a high-affinity oligonucleotide aptamerantagonist against platelet-derived growth factor-B chain (PDGF-B). In comparison with nephritic rats that received vehicle or a scrambled aptamer, treatment with the PDGF-B aptamer led to a significant reduction of mesangioproliferative changes, glomerular hypertrophy, podocyte damage, and glomerular macrophage influx on day 8. Both nephritic control groups subsequently developed progressive proteinuria and decreased renal function. On day 100, glomerulosclerosis, tubulointerstitial damage, glomerular and interstitial accumulation of types III and IV collagen, and overexpression of transforming growth factor-β were widespread. All of these chronic changes were prevented in rats that received the PDGF-B aptamer, and their functional and morphologic parameters on day 100 were largely indistinguishable from non-nephritic rats. These data provide the first evidence for a causal role of PDGF in the pathogenesis of renal scarring and point to a new, highly effective therapeutic approach to progressive, in particular mesangioproliferative, renal disease.
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