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Albumin-associated free fatty acids induce macropinocytosis in podocytes
Jun-Jae Chung, Tobias B. Huber, Markus Gödel, George Jarad, Björn Hartleben, Christopher Kwoh, Alexander Keil, Aleksey Karpitskiy, Jiancheng Hu, Christine J. Huh, Marina Cella, Richard W. Gross, Jeffrey H. Miner, Andrey S. Shaw
Jun-Jae Chung, Tobias B. Huber, Markus Gödel, George Jarad, Björn Hartleben, Christopher Kwoh, Alexander Keil, Aleksey Karpitskiy, Jiancheng Hu, Christine J. Huh, Marina Cella, Richard W. Gross, Jeffrey H. Miner, Andrey S. Shaw
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Research Article Nephrology

Albumin-associated free fatty acids induce macropinocytosis in podocytes

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Abstract

Podocytes are specialized epithelial cells in the kidney glomerulus that play important structural and functional roles in maintaining the filtration barrier. Nephrotic syndrome results from a breakdown of the kidney filtration barrier and is associated with proteinuria, hyperlipidemia, and edema. Additionally, podocytes undergo changes in morphology and internalize plasma proteins in response to this disorder. Here, we used fluid-phase tracers in murine models and determined that podocytes actively internalize fluid from the plasma and that the rate of internalization is increased when the filtration barrier is disrupted. In cultured podocytes, the presence of free fatty acids (FFAs) associated with serum albumin stimulated macropinocytosis through a pathway that involves FFA receptors, the Gβ/Gγ complex, and RAC1. Moreover, mice with elevated levels of plasma FFAs as the result of a high-fat diet were more susceptible to Adriamycin-induced proteinuria than were animals on standard chow. Together, these results support a model in which podocytes sense the disruption of the filtration barrier via FFAs bound to albumin and respond by enhancing fluid-phase uptake. The response to FFAs may function in the development of nephrotic syndrome by amplifying the effects of proteinuria.

Authors

Jun-Jae Chung, Tobias B. Huber, Markus Gödel, George Jarad, Björn Hartleben, Christopher Kwoh, Alexander Keil, Aleksey Karpitskiy, Jiancheng Hu, Christine J. Huh, Marina Cella, Richard W. Gross, Jeffrey H. Miner, Andrey S. Shaw

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Figure 1

Podocytes are highly endocytotic in vivo, and endocytosis is stimulated under proteinuric conditions.

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Podocytes are highly endocytotic in vivo, and endocytosis is stimulated ...
(A–F) WT or Lamb2–/– mice were injected i.v. with 70 kDa FITC-Ficoll (A–C, green) or 10 kDa FITC-dextran (D–F, green). Twenty-four hours after injection, glomerular sections were stained for laminin α5 (A, B, D, and E, red) or podocin (C and F, red) and counterstained with Hoechst 33342 (blue). Insets are enlarged images of the indicated areas. (G and H) Control or Adriamycin-injected mice were injected i.v. with FITC-albumin (green). Twenty-four hours after injection, glomerular sections were stained for podocin (red) and DAPI (blue). Images are representative of at least 3 independent experiments. Original magnification, ×120 (all insets enlarged ×1.8).

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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