An international research collaboration, including Professor IIJIMA Kazumoto et al. (of the Department of Pediatrics, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine) has revealed that NPHS1 is a disease-susceptibility gene for steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome in children.
The NPHS1 gene encodes nephrin, a component protein for the renal glomerulus slit diaphragm, which prevents protein from being passed in the urine.
It is expected that these successful results will contribute towards understanding of the underlying mechanism and the development of new treatments for childhood nephrotic syndrome.
Main researchers who contributed towards these findings included those from the following institutions:
- Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine's Department of Pediatrics: Professor IIJIMA Kazumoto, Project Professor NOZU Kandai, Assistant Professor YAMAMURA Tomohiko, Project Assistant Professor NAGANO China and Project Assistant Professor HORINOUCHI Tomoko;
- National Center for Global Health and Medicine's Genome Medical Science Project (Toyama): including Project Leader TOKUNAGA Katsushi and Specially Appointed Researcher Xiaoyuan Jia;
- Specially-appointed lecturer HITOMI Yuki's research group in the Department of Microbiology at Hoshi University School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences;
- Associate Professor Matthew G. Sampson (of the Department of Medicine-Nephrology, Boston Children's Hospital);
- Professor Pierre Ronco (Department of Nephrology, Sorbonne University);
- Professor Rasheed Gbadegesin (Division of Nephrology, Departments of Pediatrics, Duke University Medical Center);
- Professor Hae Il Cheong (Department of Pediatrics, Seoul National University Children's Hospital);
- Professor Kyuyong Song (Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Ulsan College of Medicine).
The results of this study were published online in the international scientific journal 'Kidney International' on June 13.
Main Points
- Nephrotic syndrome causes excessive amounts of protein to be passed in the urine, resulting in severely low levels of protein in the blood. It is the most commonly occurring childhood chronic kidney disease. In Japan, it is both a designated intractable disease and a specific pediatric chronic disease. The cause has not been illuminated.
- The majority of cases in children are steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome, which can be ameliorated with steroids. It is believed that an immunological trigger, such as an infection, stimulates the syndrome's occurrence in people who have some kind of genetic susceptibility (disease-susceptibility gene. It is understood that HLA-DR/DQ is a disease-susceptibility gene for this syndrome, however susceptibility genes outside the HLA have not been illuminated.
- A Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) was conducted to compare the Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) across all regions of the genome in Japanese patients with childhood steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome with those of healthy people. A trans-ethnic international meta-analysis was then conducted, and it revealed that NPHS1 is a disease-susceptibility gene.
- It is hoped that these findings will contribute towards illuminating the underlying mechanism behind childhood nephrotic syndrome and the development of new treatments.
Research background
Childhood nephrotic syndrome is the most common chronic kidney disease affecting children; in Japan it occurs at a yearly rate of 6.49 children out of every 100,000 (approximately 1,000 cases countrywide). It is a disease with unclear causes in which excessive amounts of protein are passed in the urine, resulting in severely low levels of protein in the blood.
In Japan, it has been classified as both a specific pediatric chronic disease and a designated intractable disease. Between 80-90% of childhood nephrotic syndrome cases are steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome, meaning that they can be sent into complete remission through steroid treatment.
However, about 20% of patients experience repeated relapses even in adulthood. There is a strong demand to illuminate the disease's causes and pathology, and utilize this knowledge to develop a definitive treatment method.
The majority of steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome cases are multifactorial. It is thought to occur due to a combination of some kind of genetic factor (disease-susceptibility gene) and an immunological trigger, such as an infection. Professor Iijima et al.'s research up until now has revealed that HLA-DR/DQ is a disease-susceptibility gene, however susceptibility genes outside the HLA region have yet to be illuminated.
Research findings
The research group has so far collected genomic DNA from around 1,300 patients with childhood nephrotic syndrome, with the cooperation of pediatric nephrology specialists across Japan. For this particular research, they used samples from 987 of the above cases that were childhood steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome with samples from 3,206 healthy Japanese donors as a control.
GWAS was performed using the SNP array 'Japonica', which is the most appropriate for carrying out this genetic test on Japanese individuals. From these results, variants in the NPHS1-KIRREL2 region on chromosome 19 (19q13.12) with genome-wide significance were identified. These variants are outside the HLA-DR/DQ region.
Trans-ethnic replication studies into these multiple variants in the NPHS1-KIRREL2 region were conducted across various populations, including Korean, South Asian, African, European, Hispanic and Maghrebian (Northwest African).
The investigation covered patients with steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome (1,063 people in total) and healthy counterparts of the same ethnicity (19,729 people in total). The results were replicated in the Korean, South Asian and African datasets.
An international meta-analysis including the Japanese cohort also illuminated the significance of these multiple variants in NPHS1.
Subsequently, the relationship between these multiple variants in NPHS1 and NPHS1 mRNA expression in the glomerulus was investigated. The NPHS1 mRNA expression originating from chromosomes with haplotypes containing all the risk variants was low, revealing that these variants play a role in NPHS1 mRNA regulation.
NPHS1 is the gene responsible for encoding nephrin. Nephrin is the most important protein for the formation of the renal glomerulus slit diaphragm, which acts as a barrier against urinary proteins. It is widely known that NPHS1 is the gene that causes congenital nephrotic syndrome Finnish type, a rare Mendelian genetic disorder.
This research study revealed that NPHS1 is also a disease-susceptibility gene for steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome, the most commonly occurring multifactorial kidney disorder in children.
This research represents an important milestone in our understanding of the genetics behind steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome's mechanism. It will also bring about a paradigm shift in the field of nephrology.
These results will contribute towards the illumination of the pathology of childhood nephrotic syndrome. It is hoped that such knowledge could be applied to the development of new treatment methods.
Further developments
Next we will investigate the link between HLA and nephrin. We aim to develop more effective, safe treatment and prevention methods for steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome while illuminating the causes and pathology behind the disease.
Source:
Journal reference:
Jia, X., et al. (2020) Common risk variants in NPHS1 and TNFSF15 are associated with childhood steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome. Kidney International. doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2020.05.029.