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Podocyte Lipotoxicity in CKD

Jin‐Ju Kim, Sydney S. Wilbon, Alessia Fornoni

2021Kidney36031 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

CKD represents the ninth most common cause of death in the United States but, despite this large health burden, treatment options for affected patients remain limited. To remedy this, several relevant pathways have been identified that may lead to novel therapeutic options. Among them, altered renal lipid metabolism, first described in 1982, has been recognized as a common pathway in clinical and experimental CKD of both metabolic and nonmetabolic origin. This observation has led many researchers to investigate the cause of this renal parenchyma lipid accumulation and its downstream effect on renal structure and function. Among key cellular components of the kidney parenchyma, podocytes are terminally differentiated cells that cannot be easily replaced when lost. Clinical and experimental evidence supports a role of reduced podocyte number in the progression of CKD. Given the importance of the podocytes in the maintenance of the glomerular filtration barrier and the accumulation of TG and cholesterol-rich lipid droplets in the podocyte and glomerulus in kidney diseases that cause CKD, understanding the upstream cause and downstream consequences of lipid accumulation in podocytes may lead to novel therapeutic opportunities. In this review, we hope to consolidate our understanding of the causes and consequences of dysregulated renal lipid metabolism in CKD development and progression, with a major focus on podocytes.

Topics & Concepts

PodocyteLipotoxicityLipid metabolismKidneyMedicineRenal functionLipid dropletInternal medicineBiologyEndocrinologyBioinformaticsPathologyDiabetes mellitusProteinuriaInsulin resistanceRenal Diseases and GlomerulopathiesChronic Kidney Disease and DiabetesBirth, Development, and Health