Abstract
The mesangial cell provides structural support to the kidney glomerulus. A polymerase chain reaction-based cDNA display approach identified a novel protein-tyrosine phosphatase, rPTP-GMC1, whose transcript expression is transiently and dramatically up-regulated during the period of mesangial cell migration and proliferation that follows mesangial cell injury in the anti-Thy 1 model of mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis in the rat. In situ hybridization analysis confirmed that rPTP-GMC1 mRNA is up-regulated specifically by mesangial cells responding to the injury and is not detectable in other cells in the kidney or in many normal tissues. In cell culture, rPTP-GMC1 is expressed by mesangial cells but not by glomerular endothelial or epithelial cells (podocytes). The longest transcript (7.5 kilobases) encodes a receptor-like protein-tyrosine phosphatase consisting of a single catalytic domain, a transmembrane segment, and 18 fibronectin type III-like repeats in the extracellular segment. A splice variant predicts a truncated molecule missing the catalytic domain. rPTP-GMC1 maps to human chromosome 12q15 and to the distal end of mouse chromosome 10. The predicted structure of rPTP-GMC1 and its pattern of expression in vivo and in culture suggest that it plays a role in regulating the adhesion and migration of mesangial cells in response to injury.
Highlights
Glomerular disease is initiated by a variety of factors, including immunologic, infectious, and toxic agents, as well as hemodynamic processes
The potential importance of protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPase) in the glomerulus has been underscored by the recent identification of GLEPP1, a type III receptor-like PTPase, which is localized to the specialized foot processes of the podocyte [11, 12]
Our results demonstrate that rPTP-GMC1 is highly restricted to the mesangial cell and that expression is acutely up-regulated in actively proliferating and migrating mesangial cells in the anti-Thy 1 model. rPTP-GMC1 is similar in structure to GLEPP1 and may sense or regulate cell-cell or cell-matrix interactions to mediate glomerular repair
Summary
Glomerular disease is initiated by a variety of factors, including immunologic, infectious, and toxic agents, as well as hemodynamic processes. To identify PTPases as potential mediators of the mesangial cell response in glomerular disease, we have evaluated PTPases expressed in the rat anti-Thy 1 model. This report describes the identification, molecular cloning, and characterization of rPTP-GMC1, a new receptor PTPase expressed by glomerular mesangial cells.
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