Karin S. Peterson, Jing-Feng Huang, Jessica Zhu, Vivette D’Agati, Xuejun Liu, Nancy Miller, Mark G. Erlander, Michael R. Jackson, Robert J. Winchester
J Clin Invest.
2004;
113(12):1722–1733
doi:10.1172/JCI19139
This article Copyright © 2004, The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Abstract
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T
he molecular pathogenesis of focal/diffuse proliferative lupus
glomerulonephritis was studied by cDNA microarray analysis of gene expression in
glomeruli from clinical biopsies. Transcriptional phenotyping of glomeruli
isolated by laser-capture microscopy revealed considerable kidney-to-kidney
heterogeneity in increased transcript expression, resulting in four main gene
clusters that identified the presence of B cells, several myelomonocytic
lineages, fibroblast and epithelial cell proliferation, matrix alterations, and
expression of type I IFN–inducible genes. Glomerulus-to-glomerulus
variation within a kidney was less marked. The myeloid lineage transcripts,
characteristic of those found in isolated activated macrophages and myeloid
dendritic cells, were widely distributed in all biopsy samples. One major
subgroup of the samples expressed fibrosis-related genes that correlated with
pathological evidence of glomerulosclerosis; however, decreased expression of
TGF-β1 argued against its role in lupus renal fibrosis. Expression
of type I IFN–inducible transcripts by a second subset of samples
was associated with reduced expression of fibrosis-related genes and milder
pathological features. This pattern of gene expression resembled that exhibited
by activated NK cells. A large gene cluster with decreased expression found in
all samples included ion channels and transcription factors, indicating a
loss-of-function response to the glomerular injury.
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