Disruption of glomerular basement membrane charge through podocyte-specific mutation of agrin does not alter glomerular permselectivity

Scott J. Harvey, George Jarad, Jeanette Cunningham, Angelique L. Rops, Johan Van Der Vlag, Jo H. Berden, Marcus J. Moeller, Lawrence B. Holzman, Robert W. Burgess, Jeffrey H. Miner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

149 Scopus citations

Abstract

Glomerular charge selectivity has been attributed to anionic heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) in the glomerular basement membrane (GBM). Agrin is the predominant GBM-HSPG, but evidence that it contributes to the charge barrier is lacking, because newborn agrin-deficient mice die from neuromuscular defects. To study agrin in adult kidney, a new conditional allele was used to generate podocyte-specific knockouts. Mutants were viable and displayed no renal histopathology up to 9 months of age. Perlecan, a HSPG normally confined to the mesangium in mature glomeruli, did not appear in the mutant GBM, which lacked heparan sulfate. Moreover, GBM agrin was found to be derived primarily from podocytes. Polyethyleneimine labeling of fetal kidneys revealed anionic sites along both laminae rarae of the GBM that became most prominent along the subepithelial aspect at maturity; labeling was greatly reduced along the subepithelial aspect in agrin-deficient and conditional knockout mice. Despite this severe charge disruption, the glomerular filtration barrier was not compromised, even when challenged with bovine serum albumin overload. We conclude that agrin is not required for establishment or maintenance of GBM architecture. Although agrin contributes significantly to the anionic charge to the GBM, both it and its charge are not needed for glomerular permselectivity. This calls into question whether charge selectivity is a feature of the GBM.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)139-152
Number of pages14
JournalAmerican Journal of Pathology
Volume171
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2007

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