Abstract

Polycystic kidney disease is a disorder of renal epithelial growth and differentiation. Transcription factor EB (TFEB), a master regulator of lysosome biogenesis and function, was studied for a potential role in this disorder. Nuclear translocation and functional responses to TFEB activation were studied in three murine models of renal cystic disease, including knockouts of folliculin, folliculin interacting proteins 1 and 2, and polycystin-1 (Pkd1) as well as in mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacking Pkd1 and three-dimensional cultures of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Nuclear translocation of Tfeb characterized cystic but not noncystic renal tubular epithelia in all three murine models as both an early and sustained response to cyst formation. Epithelia expressed elevated levels of Tfeb-dependent gene products, including cathepsin B and glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B. Nuclear Tfeb translocation was observed in mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacking Pkd1 but not wild-type fibroblasts. Pkd1 knockout fibroblasts were characterized by increased Tfeb-dependent transcripts, lysosomal biogenesis and repositioning, and increased autophagy. The growth of Madin-Darby canine kidney cell cysts was markedly increased following exposure to the TFEB agonist compound C1, and nuclear Tfeb translocation was observed in response to both forskolin and compound C1 treatment. Nuclear TFEB also characterized cystic epithelia but not noncystic tubular epithelia in human patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. Noncanonical activation of TFEB is characteristic of cystic epithelia in multiple models of renal cystic disease including those associated with loss of Pkd1. Nuclear TFEB translocation is functionally active in these models and may be a component of a general pathway contributing to cystogenesis and growth.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Changes in epithelial cell metabolism are important in renal cyst development. The role of TFEB, a transcriptional regulator of lysosomal function, was explored in several models of renal cystic disease and human ADPKD tissue sections. Nuclear TFEB translocation was uniformly observed in cystic epithelia in each model of renal cystic disease examined. TFEB translocation was functionally active and associated with lysosomal biogenesis and perinuclear repositioning, increased TFEB-associated protein expression, and activation of autophagic flux. Compound C1, a TFEB agonist, promoted cyst growth in 3-D cultures of MDCK cells. Nuclear TFEB translocation is an underappreciated signaling pathway for cystogenesis that may represent a new paradigm for cystic kidney disease.

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