Polycystin-2 expression is increased following experimental ischaemic renal injury.
BACKGROUND: Mutations in PKD2 account for 15% of patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. Expression of the PKD2 protein, polycystin-2, is developmentally regulated, suggesting a major role for this protein during nephrogenesis. However, the regulation of polycystin-2 expression in the adult kidney has not been previously explored. METHODS: We have utilized an established model of renal ischaemic injury to study polycystin-2 expression in adult rat kidney for up to 120 h following ischaemia. RESULTS: Our results indicate that polycystin-2 expression is increased in the post-ischaemic kidney by up to 5-fold, with a peak in expression at 48 h reperfusion. This time course mirrored the increase in cell proliferation observed. In the non-ischaemic kidney, polycystin-2 expression was highest in distal nephron segments but faint proximal tubular staining was also observed. No expression was seen in glomeruli. In the ischaemic kidney, polycystin-2 expression was greatly increased but the increase in expression was not restricted to segments with the highest number of proliferating cells. Moreover, polycystin-2 was detectable mainly intracellularly following ischaemia. Consistent with this, polycystin-2 was completely sensitive to endoglycosidase H during renal recovery, suggesting that it remains largely retained within the endoplasmic reticulum under these conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide the first evidence that polycystin-2 is increased following renal ischaemia, but show that this increase is not restricted to actively proliferating cells. The increase in polycystin-2 may relate instead to the process of cellular repair or differentiation following injury.[1]References
- Polycystin-2 expression is increased following experimental ischaemic renal injury. Zhao, Y., Haylor, J.L., Ong, A.C. Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. (2002) [Pubmed]
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