- Dynein-Mediated Trafficking: A New Mechanism of Diabetic Podocytopathy.
Dynein-Mediated Trafficking: A New Mechanism of Diabetic Podocytopathy.
The expression of dynein is increased in human and rodent models of diabetic nephropathy (DN), eliciting a new dynein-driven pathogenesis. Uncontrolled dynein impairs the molecular sieve of kidney by remodeling the postendocytic triage and homeostasis of nephrin. The delineation of the dynein-driven pathogenesis promises a broad spectrum of new therapeutic targets for human DN. Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is characterized by increased endocytosis and degradation of nephrin, a protein that comprises the molecular sieve of the glomerular filtration barrier. While nephrin internalization has been found activated in diabetes-stressed podocytes, the postinternalization trafficking steps that lead to the eventual depletion of nephrin and the development of DN are unclear. Our work on an inherited podocytopathy uncovered that dysregulated dynein could compromise nephrin trafficking, leading us to test whether and how dynein mediates the pathogenesis of DN. We analyzed the transcription of dynein components in public DN databases, using the Nephroseq platform. We verified altered dynein transcription in diabetic podocytopathy by quantitative PCR. Dynein-mediated trafficking and degradation of nephrin was investigated using an in vitro nephrin trafficking model and was demonstrated in a mouse model with streptozotocin (STZ)-induced DN and in human kidney biopsy sections. Our transcription analysis revealed increased expression of dynein in human DN and diabetic mouse kidney, correlated significantly with the severity of hyperglycemia and DN. In diabetic podocytopathy, we observed that dynein-mediated postendocytic sorting of nephrin was upregulated, resulting in accelerated nephrin degradation and disrupted nephrin recycling. In hyperglycemia-stressed podocytes, Dynll1, one of the most upregulated dynein components, is required for the recruitment of dynein complex that mediates the postendocytic sorting of nephrin. This was corroborated by observing enhanced Dynll1-nephrin colocalization in podocytes of diabetic patients, as well as dynein-mediated trafficking and degradation of nephrin in STZ-induced diabetic mice with hyperglycemia. Knockdown of Dynll1 attenuated lysosomal degradation of nephrin and promoted its recycling, suggesting the essential role of Dynll1 in dynein-mediated mistrafficking. Our studies show that hyperglycemia stimulates dynein-mediated trafficking of nephrin to lysosomes by inducing its expression. The decoding of dynein-driven pathogenesis of diabetic podocytopathy offers a spectrum of new dynein-related therapeutic targets for DN.