Author:
Goligorsky M. S.,Lieberthal W.,Racusen L.,Simon E. E.
Abstract
This review summarizes the existing evidence implicating disordered adhesion of renal tubular epithelial cells to the basement membrane in the pathophysiology of acute renal failure. The following three major lines of investigation are discussed: 1) exfoliation of renal tubular epithelial cells as a potential mechanism of tubular obstruction, 2) normal distribution of integrin receptors along the tubular apparatus, and 3) redistribution of integrin receptors and remodeling of the cytoskeleton following acute injury to renal tubular epithelium. We advance the hypothesis that the loss of the basolateral expression of integrin receptors is responsible for the exfoliation of viable proximal epithelial cells and that the redistribution of integrin receptors from the basolateral to the apical surface of epithelial cells facilitates adhesion of detached cells to the in situ cells. These two processes culminate in tubular obstruction.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
80 articles.
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