APOL1-G2 accelerates nephrocyte cell death by inhibiting the autophagy pathway

Author:

Zhu Jun-yi123ORCID,Lee Jin-Gu123ORCID,Fu Yulong12ORCID,van de Leemput Joyce123ORCID,Ray Patricio E.4,Han Zhe123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Precision Disease Modeling 1 , Department of Medicine , , Baltimore, MD 21201 , USA

2. University of Maryland School of Medicine 1 , Department of Medicine , , Baltimore, MD 21201 , USA

3. University of Maryland School of Medicine 2 Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Nutrition, Department of Medicine , , Baltimore, MD 21201 , USA

4. Child Health Research Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903 3 Department of Pediatrics , , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT People of African ancestry who carry the APOL1 risk alleles G1 or G2 are at high risk of developing kidney diseases through not fully understood mechanisms that impair the function of podocytes. It is also not clear whether the APOL1-G1 and APOL1-G2 risk alleles affect these cells through similar mechanisms. Previously, we have developed transgenic Drosophila melanogaster lines expressing either the human APOL1 reference allele (G0) or APOL1-G1 specifically in nephrocytes, the cells homologous to mammalian podocytes. We have found that nephrocytes that expressed the APOL1-G1 risk allele display accelerated cell death, in a manner similar to that of cultured human podocytes and APOL1 transgenic mouse models. Here, to compare how the APOL1-G1 and APOL1-G2 risk alleles affect the structure and function of nephrocytes in vivo, we generated nephrocyte-specific transgenic flies that either expressed the APOL1-G2 or both G1 and G2 (G1G2) risk alleles on the same allele. We found that APOL1-G2- and APOL1-G1G2-expressing nephrocytes developed more severe changes in autophagic pathways, acidification of organelles and the structure of the slit diaphragm, compared to G1-expressing nephrocytes, leading to their premature death. We conclude that both risk alleles affect similar key cell trafficking pathways, leading to reduced autophagy and suggesting new therapeutic targets to prevent APOL1 kidney diseases.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

University of Maryland School of Medicine

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Immunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous),Medicine (miscellaneous),Neuroscience (miscellaneous)

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1. First person – Jun-yi Zhu;Disease Models & Mechanisms;2023-12-01

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