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Sun, Hua

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Sun, Hua

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    Publication
    Discovery of new glomerular disease-relevant genes by translational profiling of podocytes in vivo
    (2014) Grgic, Ivica; Hofmeister, Andreas F.; Genovese, Giulio; Bernhardy, Andrea J.; Sun, Hua; Maarouf, Omar H.; Bijol, Vanesa; Pollak, Martin; Humphreys, Benjamin D.
    Identifying new biomarkers and therapeutic targets for podocytopathies such as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) requires a detailed analysis of transcriptional changes in podocytes over the course of disease. Here we used translating ribosome affinity purification (TRAP) to isolate and profile podocyte-specific mRNA in two different models of FSGS. Expressed eGFP-tagged ribosomal protein L10a in podocytes under the control of the Collagen-1α1 promoter enabled podocyte-specific mRNA isolation in a one-step process over the course of disease. This TRAP protocol robustly enriched known podocyte-specific mRNAs. We crossed col1α1-L10a mice with the actn4−/− and actn4+/K256E models of FSGS and analyzed podocyte transcriptional profiles at 2, 6 and 44 weeks of age. Two upregulated podocyte genes in murine FSGS (CXCL1 and DMPK) were found to be upregulated at the protein level in biopsies from patients with FSGS, validating this approach. There was no dilution of podocyte-specific transcripts during disease. These are the first podocyte-specific RNA expression datasets during aging and in two models of FSGS. This approach identified new podocyte proteins that are upregulated in FSGS and help define novel biomarkers and therapeutic targets for human glomerular disease.
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    Human Kidney Disease-causing INF2 Mutations Perturb Rho/Dia Signaling in the Glomerulus
    (Elsevier, 2014) Sun, Hua; Al-Romaih, Khaldoun I.; MacRae, Calum; Pollak, Martin
    Mutations in Inverted Formin 2 (INF2), a diaphanous formin family protein that regulates actin cytoskeleton dynamics, cause focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and Charcot–Marie–Tooth Disease (CMT) in humans. In addition to directly remodeling actin filaments in vitro, we have shown that INF2 regulates intracellular actin dynamics and actin dependent cellular behavior by opposing Rhoa/Dia signaling. As a step towards a better understanding of the human kidney disease, we wanted to explore the relevance of these findings to the in vivo situation. We used dose dependent knockdown of INF2 to first define an in vivo model and establish an overt glomerular phenotype in zebrafish. This simple assay was validated by rescue with wild type INF2 confirming the specificity of the findings. The edema, podocyte dysfunction, and an altered glomerular filtration barrier observed in the zebrafish pronephros correlate with mistrafficking of glomerular slit diaphragm proteins, defective slit-diaphragm signaling, and disinhibited diaphanous formin (mDia) activity. In contrast to wild-type human INF2, INF2 mutants associated with kidney disease fail to rescue the zINF2 morphant phenotype. Of particular interest, this INF2 knockdown phenotype is also rescued by loss of either RhoA or Dia2. This simple assay allows the demonstration that INF2 functions, at least in part, to modulate Dia-mediated Rho signaling, and that disease causing mutations specifically impair this regulatory function. These data support a model in which disease-associated diaphanous inhibitory domain (DID) mutants in INF2 interfere with its binding to and inhibition of Dia, leading to uncontrolled Rho/Dia signaling and perturbed actin dynamics. Methods to fine tune Rho signaling in the glomerulus may lead to new approaches to therapy in humans.