[HTML][HTML] Glomerulosclerosis is transmitted by bone marrow–derived mesangial cell progenitors

F Cornacchia, A Fornoni, AR Plati… - The Journal of …, 2001 - Am Soc Clin Investig
F Cornacchia, A Fornoni, AR Plati, A Thomas, Y Wang, L Inverardi, LJ Striker, GE Striker
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2001Am Soc Clin Investig
We found that ROP Os/+(Os/+) mice had diffuse glomerulosclerosis and glomerular
hypertrophy and that their mesangial cells (the vascular smooth muscle cells of the
glomerulus) displayed an apparent sclerosing phenotype. Since mesangial cells are the
major source of scar tissue in glomerulosclerosis, we postulated that the sclerosis
phenotype was carried by mesangial cell progenitors and that this phenotype could be
derived from the bone marrow (BM). Therefore, we transplanted BM from Os/+ mice into …
We found that ROP Os/+(Os/+) mice had diffuse glomerulosclerosis and glomerular hypertrophy and that their mesangial cells (the vascular smooth muscle cells of the glomerulus) displayed an apparent sclerosing phenotype. Since mesangial cells are the major source of scar tissue in glomerulosclerosis, we postulated that the sclerosis phenotype was carried by mesangial cell progenitors and that this phenotype could be derived from the bone marrow (BM). Therefore, we transplanted BM from Os/+ mice into congenic ROP+/+ mice (+/+ mice), which have normal glomeruli. We found that glomeruli of+/+ recipients of Os/+ marrow contained the Os/+ genotype, were hypertrophied, and contained increased extracellular matrix. Clones of recipient glomerular mesangial cells with the donor genotype were found in all+/+ recipients that developed mesangial sclerosis and glomerular hypertrophy, whereas+/+ recipients of+/+ BM had normal glomeruli. Thus, the sclerotic (Os/+) or normal (+/+) genotype and phenotype were present in, and transmitted by, BM-derived progenitors. These data show that glomerular mesangial cell progenitors are derived from the BM and can deliver a disease phenotype to normal glomeruli. Glomerular lesions may therefore be perpetuated or aggravated, rather than resolved, by newly arriving progenitor cells exhibiting a disease phenotype.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation