The present study examined whether development of renal injury in the nondiabetic obese Dahl salt-sensitive leptin receptor mutant (SSmutant) strain is associated with elevations in glomerular filtration rate and renal lipid accumulation. Baseline mean arterial pressure at 6 wk of age was similar between Dahl salt-sensitive wild-type (SS) and SSmutant rats. However, by 18 wk of age, the SSmutant strain developed hypertension, while the elevation in mean arterial pressure was not as severe in SS rats (192 ± 4 and 149 ± 6 mmHg, respectively). At baseline, proteinuria was fourfold higher in SSmutant than SS rats and remained elevated throughout the study. The early development of progressive proteinuria was associated with renal hyperfiltration followed by a decline in renal function over the course of study in the SSmutant compared with SS rats. Kidneys from the SSmutant strain displayed more glomerulosclerosis and glomerular lipid accumulation than SS rats. Glomeruli were isolated from the renal cortex of both strains at 6 and 18 wk of age, and RNA sequencing was performed to identify genes and pathways driving glomerular injury. We observed significant increases in expression of the influx lipid transporters, chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 16 (Cxcl16) and scavenger receptor and fatty acid translocase (Cd36), respectively, and a significant decrease in expression of the efflux lipid transporter, ATP-binding cassette subfamily A member 2 (; cholesterol efflux regulatory protein 2), in SSmutant compared with SS rats at 6 and 18 wk of age, which were validated by RT-PCR analysis. These data suggest an association between glomerular hyperfiltration and glomerular lipid accumulation during the early development of proteinuria associated with obesity.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7191445 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00438.2019 | DOI Listing |
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