Advillin acts upstream of phospholipase C is an element of 1 in steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome
Date
2017Author
Schneider, Ronen
George, Sudeep P.
Esmaeilniakooshkghazi, Amin
Choi, Won-Il
Jobst-Schwan, Tilman
Schmidt, Johanna Magdalena
Widmeier, Eugen
Warejko, Jillian K.
Hermle, Tobias
Schapiro, David
Lovric, Svjetlana
Shril, Shirlee
Daga, Ankana
Shenoy, Mohan
Tse, Yincent
Bald, Martin
Helmchen, Udo
Mir, Sevgi
BERDELİ, AFİG
Kari, Jameela A.
El Desoky, Sherif
Soliman, Neveen A.
Bagga, Arvind
Mane, Shrikant
Jairajpuri, Mohamad A.
Lifton, Richard P.
Khurana, Seema
Martins, Jose C.
Hildebrandt, Friedhelm
Nayir, Ahmet
Rao, Jia
Ashraf, Shazia
Tan, Weizhen
van der Ven, Amelie T.
Gee, Heon Yung
Braun, Daniela A.
Feher, Krisztina
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) is a frequent cause of chronic kidney disease. Here, we identified recessive mutations in the gene encoding the actin-binding protein advillin (AVIL) in 3 unrelated families with SRNS. While all AVIL mutations resulted in a marked loss of its actin-bundling ability, truncation of AVIL also disrupted colocalization with F-actin, thereby leading to impaired actin binding and severing. Additionally, AVIL colocalized and interacted with the phospholipase enzyme PLCE1 and with the ARP2/3 actin-modulating complex. Knockdown of AVIL in human podocytes reduced actin stress fibers at the cell periphery, prevented recruitment of PLCE1 to the ARP3-rich lamellipodia, blocked EGF-induced generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) by PLCE1, and attenuated the podocyte migration rate (PMR). These effects were reversed by overexpression of WT AVIL but not by overexpression of any of the 3 patient-derived AVIL mutants. The PMR was increased by overexpression of WT Avil or PLCE1, or by EGF stimulation; however, this increased PMR was ameliorated by inhibition of the ARP2/3 complex, indicating that ARP-dependent lamellipodia formation occurs downstream of AVIL and PLCE1 function. Together, these results delineate a comprehensive pathogenic axis of SRNS that integrates loss of AVIL function with alterations in the action of PLCE1, an established SRNS protein.
Collections
- Makale [92796]