Collapsing glomerulopathy: an inflammatory podocytopathy?

Journal Article (Journal Article;Review)

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Collapsing glomerulopathy is a relatively new and debated podocytopathy. Among several conjectures, inflammatory injury orchestrated by podocytes is emerging to explain the pathogenesis of collapsing glomerulopathy. Here, we briefly summarize recent studies in support of this novel and intriguing hypothesis. RECENT FINDINGS: Immunohistochemical analyses of markers conventionally used to demarcate podocytes apart from parietal epithelium identified the parietal podocyte. MafB-deficient mice exhibited abnormal podocyte and macrophage differentiation, suggesting ancestral and functional overlap. These apparent developmental anomalies were detected in studies showing an admixture of hyperplastic podocytes with macrophage epitopes and hyperplastic parietal epithelium in pseudocrescents and in true crescents. Experimental antibody-mediated injury of podocytes could trigger capillary collapse and pseudocrescent formation marked by recruitment of epithelial cells from Bowman's capsule. In contrast, experimental stabilization of hypoxia-inducible factors within podocytes--a known inflammatory response by macrophages--could trigger podocyte proliferation and the formation of true necrotizing crescents. SUMMARY: Preliminary evidence suggests that visceral and parietal podocytes may become macrophage-like inflammatory mediators of proliferative epithelial injury within the glomerulus. This may manifest as collapsing glomerulopathy or crescentic glomerulonephritis--lesions that appear to be anatomically and pathogenically linked.

Full Text

Duke Authors

Cited Authors

  • Barisoni, L; Nelson, PJ

Published Date

  • May 2007

Published In

Volume / Issue

  • 16 / 3

Start / End Page

  • 192 - 195

PubMed ID

  • 17420661

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1062-4821

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1097/MNH.0b013e32805b726b

Language

  • eng

Conference Location

  • England