New insights into mechanisms of immune glomerular injury.

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RESUMO

Although glomerular disease remains the most common cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide, major advances have been made recently in understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms that mediate these disorders. The nephrotic syndrome in noninflammatory lesions such as minimal change or focal sclerosis and membranous nephropathy results from disorders of the glomerular epithelial cell that can be simulated in animal models by antibodies to various epithelial cell membrane epitopes. Clarification of how these antibodies affect epithelial cells to induce a loss of glomerular barrier function should substantially improve understanding of the pathogenesis of minimal change or focal sclerosis. In membranous nephropathy, proteinuria is mediated primarily by the C5b-9 complex through similar mechanisms that also involve glomerular epithelial cells as targets. Inflammatory glomerular lesions are induced by circulating inflammatory cells or proliferating resident glomerular cells. Understanding of how these cells induce tissue injury has also evolved considerably over the past decade. Neutrophil-induced disease involves leukocyte adhesion molecules in regulating neutrophil localization; proteases, oxidants, and myeloperoxidase in mediating injury; and platelets in augmenting these processes. The activated mesangial cell exhibits altered phenotype and proliferation with the release of oxidants and proteases. Mesangial cell proliferation may be initiated by basic fibroblast growth factor and is maintained by an autocrine mechanism involving platelet-derived growth factor. Transforming growth factor beta is important in the subsequent development of sclerosis.

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