We studied the opisthonephric (mesonephric) kidneys of adult male and female Xenopus laevis using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of vascular corrosion casts and light microscopy of paraplast embedded tissue sections. Both techniques displayed glomeruli from ventral to mid-dorsal regions of the kidneys with single glomeruli located dorsally close beneath the renal capsule. Glomeruli in general were fed by a single afferent arteriole and drained via a single thinner efferent arteriole into peritubular vessels. Light microscopy and SEM of vascular corrosion casts revealed sphincters at the origins of afferent arterioles, which arose closely, spaced from their parent renal arteries. The second source of renal blood supply via renal portal veins varied interindividually in branching patterns with vessels showing up to five branching orders before they became peritubular vessels. Main trunks and their first- and second-order branches revealed clear longish endothelial cell nuclei imprint patterns oriented parallel to the vessels longitudinal axis, a pattern characteristic for arteries. Peritubular vessels had irregular contours and were never seen as clear cylindrical structures. They ran rather parallel, anastomosed with neighbors and changed into renal venules and veins, which finally emptied into the ventrally located posterior caval vein. A third source of blood supply of the peritubular vessels by straight terminal portions of renal arteries (vasa recta) was not found.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmor.21132 | DOI Listing |
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol
January 2025
Feinberg Cardiovascular and Renal Research Institute, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Background: Lymphangiogenesis is believed to be a protective response in the setting of multiple forms of kidney injury and mitigates the progression of interstitial fibrosis. To augment this protective response, promoting kidney lymphangiogenesis is being investigated as a potential treatment to slow the progression of kidney disease. As injury-related lymphangiogenesis is driven by signaling from the receptor VEGFR3 (vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3) in response to the cognate growth factor VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)-C released by tubular epithelial cells, this signaling pathway is a candidate for future kidney therapeutics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRheumatology (Oxford)
October 2024
Division of Rheumatology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Am J Transplant
January 2025
Department of Renal Medicine, Westmead Hospital, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia.
Microvascular inflammation (MVI) is a key diagnostic feature of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR); however, recipients without donor-specific antibodies (DSA) defy etiologic classification using C4d staining of peritubular capillaries (C4d) and conventional DSA assignment. We evaluated MVI ≥ 2 (Banff g + ptc ≥ 2) using Banff 2019 AMR (independent of MVI ≥ 2 but including C4d) with unconventional endothelial C4d staining of glomerular capillaries (C4d) and - arterial endothelium and/or intima (C4d) using tissue immunoperoxidase, shared-eplet and subthreshold DSA (median fluorescence intensity, [MFI] 100-499), and capillary ultrastructure from 3398 kidney transplant samples for evidence of AMR. MVI ≥ 2 (n = 202 biopsies) from 149 kidneys (12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetologia
September 2024
Division of Nephrology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Aims/hypothesis: Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is the leading cause of chronic and end-stage kidney disease in the USA and worldwide. Animal models have taught us much about DKD mechanisms, but translation of this knowledge into treatments for human disease has been slowed by the lag in our molecular understanding of human DKD.
Methods: Using our Spatial TissuE Proteomics (STEP) pipeline (comprising curated human kidney tissues, multiplexed immunofluorescence and powerful analysis tools), we imaged and analysed the expression of 21 proteins in 23 tissue sections from individuals with diabetes and healthy kidneys (n=5), compared to those with DKDIIA, IIA-B and IIB (n=2 each) and DKDIII (n=1).
Int J Mol Sci
April 2024
Research and Early Development, Cardiovascular, Renal and Metabolism, BioPharmaceuticals R&D, AstraZeneca, Gothenburg, 43162 Mölndal, Sweden.
Endothelial cell (EC) injury is a crucial contributor to the progression of diabetic kidney disease (DKD), but the specific EC populations and mechanisms involved remain elusive. Kidney ECs ( = 5464) were collected at three timepoints from diabetic BTBR mice and non-diabetic littermates. Their heterogeneity, transcriptional changes, and alternative splicing during DKD progression were mapped using SmartSeq2 single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) and elucidated through pathway, network, and gene ontology enrichment analyses.
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