The role of the cell surface layer, glycocalyx is emerging in various areas of cell biology including signaling, metabolism, and immune response. Although a decrease of podocyte glycocalyx depth in glomerular pathologies has been reported before, the specific role of specialized glycocalyx between the podocyte foot processes and the glomerular basement membrane (GBM) in the function and dysfunction of the glomerular filtration barrier (GFB) is elusive. Here we aimed to develop podocyte or endothelial glycocalyx targeting strategies to gain mechanistic understanding of the specific roles of the glycocalyx in the function of GFB and in the development of albumin leakage. Our overall hypothesis is that the specialized podocyte glycocalyx forms an important additional layer of the GFB and changes in the structure and composition of podocyte glycocalyx leads to GFB dysfunction and the development of albumin leakage. New genetic mouse models were generated by the knock-in of pCAG-Lox-STOP-Lox-EGFP-Sdc1 to generate animals with Cre-dependent expression of a syndecan-1 (Sdc1) fusion protein with N-terminal, extracellular GFP. Sdc1-GFPflox animals were crossed with either Podocin-Cre or Cdh5-Cre mice for the specific genetic labeling of the glycocalyx in podocytes or endothelial cells, respectively. Intravital multiphoton microscopy (MPM) was used to measure changes in the depth of glycocalyx and corresponding changes in GFB function in vivo over time. Endoglycosidase enzymes, such as hyaluronidase (50U/animal), heparinase (0.7 U/mouse), and chondroitinase (1 U/mouse) were used to acutely modify the composition of glycocalyx. Alexa-680 conjugated wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) lectin was used to label the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) component of the glycocalyx; Alexa-594 conjugated albumin was used to visualize GFB permeability. Classic phenotyping of Pod and Cdh5 Sdc1-GFP animals showed no significant difference in terms of systolic blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate, body and kidney weight between the Sdc1-GFP and wild type littermates. The co-localization of the genetic GFP and anti-podocin immunofluorescence co-staining confirmed the podocyte-specific expression of Sdc1-GFP. In vivo MPM imaging of Pod-Sdc1-GFP mouse kidneys revealed intense linear labeling of the podocyte cell surface including the apical and basolateral surfaces of the cell body as well as the surfaces of primary, secondary, and foot processes. Interestingly, the thickness and fluorescence intensity of Sdc1-GFP labeled glycocalyx was greater on the basal surface of the podocyte at the GBM as compared to the apical surface implying the role of glycocalyx in the function of GFB. In addition, labeling of the basolateral surface of the podocyte cell body and podocyte foot processes enabled the visualization of sub-podocyte space. Acute injection of endoglycosidase enzymes significantly (3-fold) reduced Sdc1-GFP fluorescence intensity and the thickness of the linear labeling suggesting the acute shedding of podocyte glycocalyx. Importantly, increased albumin permeability of the GFB was observed simultaneously with the shedding of podocyte glycocalyx, indicating the disruption of GFB charge and size-selective functions. In conclusion, the specialized podocyte glycocalyx at the GBM may function as an important new layer of the GFB and may play an important role in the disruption of GFB functions in disease. ASN Carl W. Gottschalk Research Scholar Grant University of Southern California Dean's Pilot Project Award DK123564. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
Read full abstract