Litcius/Paper detail

Unleashing the pathological role of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in diabetic nephropathy: The intricate connection with multifaceted mechanism

Pitchai Balakumar

2024World Journal of Nephrology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Renal epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a process in which epithelial cells undergo biochemical changes and transform into mesenchymal-like cells, resulting in renal abnormalities, including fibrosis. EMT can cause diabetic nephropathy through triggering kidney fibrosis, inflammation, and functional impairment. The diverse molecular pathways that drive EMT-mediated renal fibrosis are not utterly known. Targeting key signaling pathways involved in EMT may help ameliorate diabetic nephropathy and improve renal function. In such settings, understanding precisely the complicated signaling networks is critical for developing customized therapies to intervene in EMT-mediated diabetic nephropathy.

Topics & Concepts

Diabetic nephropathyMedicineEpithelial–mesenchymal transitionFibrosisMesenchymal stem cellInflammationMechanism (biology)Cancer researchNephropathyKidneySignal transductionBioinformaticsPathologyImmunologyDiabetes mellitusInternal medicineCell biologyEndocrinologyBiologyMetastasisCancerPhilosophyEpistemologyMesenchymal stem cell researchRenal and related cancersChronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes