Collagen IV of basement membranes: II. Emergence of collagen IVα345 enabled the assembly of a compact GBM as an ultrafilter in mammalian kidneys.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Collagen IV of basement membranes: II. Emergence of collagen IVα345 enabled the assembly of a compact GBM as an ultrafilter in mammalian kidneys.
Authors: Pokidysheva, Elena N.1,2,3 elena.pokidysheva@vumc.org, Redhair, Neve2, Ailsworth, Octavia2, Page-McCaw, Patrick1,3, Rollins-Smith, Louise4, Jamwal, Vijayishwer Singh5, Yuko Ohta6, Bächinger, Hans Peter7, Murawala, Prayag5,8, Flajnik, Martin6, Fogo, Agnes B.1,9, Abrahamson, Dale10, Hudson, Julie K.2, Boudko, Sergei P.1,3,11, Hudson, Billy G.1,2,3,9,11,12,13,14,15
Source: Journal of Biological Chemistry. Dec2023, Vol. 299 Issue 12, p1-15. 15p.
Subject Terms: *BASAL lamina, *COLLAGEN, *KIDNEY failure, *GENETIC variation, *SALAMANDERS
Abstract: The collagen IVα345 (Col-IVα345) scaffold, the major constituent of the glomerular basement membrane (GBM), is a critical component of the kidney glomerular filtration barrier. In Alport syndrome, affecting millions of people worldwide, over two thousand genetic variants occur in the COL4A3, COL4A4, and COL4A5 genes that encode the Col-IVα345 scaffold. Variants cause loss of scaffold, a suprastructure that tethers macromolecules, from the GBM or assembly of a defective scaffold, causing hematuria in nearly all cases, proteinuria, and often progressive kidney failure. How these variants cause proteinuria remains an enigma. In a companion paper, we found that the evolutionary emergence of the COL4A3, COL4A4, COL4A5, and COL4A6 genes coincided with kidney emergence in hagfish and shark and that the COL4A3 and COL4A4 were lost in amphibians. These findings opened an experimental window to gain insights into functionality of the Col-IVα345 scaffold. Here, using tissue staining, biochemical analysis and TEM, we characterized the scaffold chain arrangements and the morphology of the GBM of hagfish, shark, frog, and salamander. We found that α4 and α5 chains in shark GBM and α1 and α5 chains in amphibian GBM are spatially separated. Scaffolds are distinct from one another and from the mammalian Col-IVα345 scaffold, and the GBM morphologies are distinct. Our findings revealed that the evolutionary emergence of the Col-IVα345 scaffold enabled the genesis of a compact GBM that functions as an ultrafilter. Findings shed light on the conundrum, defined decades ago, whether the GBM or slit diaphragm is the primary filter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
More Details
ISSN:00219258
DOI:10.1016/j.jbc.2023.105459
Published in:Journal of Biological Chemistry
Language:English