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Dive into the research topics where Katalin Susztak is active.

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Featured researches published by Katalin Susztak.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2004

Mouse Models of Diabetic Nephropathy

Frank C. Brosius; Charles E. Alpers; Erwin P. Böttinger; Matthew D. Breyer; Thomas M. Coffman; Susan B. Gurley; Raymond C. Harris; Masao Kakoki; Matthias Kretzler; Edward H. Leiter; Moshe Levi; Richard A. McIndoe; Kumar Sharma; Oliver Smithies; Katalin Susztak; Nobuyuki Takahashi; Takamune Takahashi

Diabetic nephropathy is a major cause of ESRD worldwide. Despite its prevalence, a lack of reliable animal models that mimic human disease has delayed the identification of specific factors that cause or predict diabetic nephropathy. The Animal Models of Diabetic Complications Consortium (AMDCC) was created in 2001 by the National Institutes of Health to develop and characterize models of diabetic nephropathy and other complications. This interim report and our online supplement detail the progress made toward that goal, specifically in the development and testing of murine models. Updates are provided on validation criteria for early and advanced diabetic nephropathy, phenotyping methods, the effect of background strain on nephropathy, current best models of diabetic nephropathy, negative models, and views of future directions. AMDCC investigators and other investigators in the field have yet to validate a complete murine model of human diabetic kidney disease. Nonetheless, the critical analysis of existing murine models substantially enhances our understanding of this disease process.


Nature Medicine | 2008

The Notch pathway in podocytes plays a role in the development of glomerular disease

Thiruvur Niranjan; Bernhard Bielesz; Antje Gruenwald; Manish P. Ponda; Jeffrey B. Kopp; David B. Thomas; Katalin Susztak

Albuminuria associated with sclerosis of the glomerulus leads to a progressive decline in renal function affecting millions of people. Here we report that activation of the Notch pathway, which is critical in glomerular patterning, contributes to the development of glomerular disease. Expression of the intracellular domain of Notch1 (ICN1) was increased in glomerular epithelial cells in diabetic nephropathy and in focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Conditional re-expression of ICN1 in vivo exclusively in podocytes caused proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis. In vitro and in vivo studies showed that ICN1 induced apoptosis of podocytes through the activation of p53. Genetic deletion of a Notch transcriptional partner (Rbpj) specifically in podocytes or pharmacological inhibition of the Notch pathway (with a γ-secretase inhibitor) protected rats with proteinuric kidney diseases. Collectively, our observations suggest that Notch activation in mature podocytes is a new mechanism in the pathogenesis of glomerular disease and thus could represent a new therapeutic target.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Epithelial Notch signaling regulates interstitial fibrosis development in the kidneys of mice and humans

Bernhard Bielesz; Yasemin Sirin; Han Si; Thiruvur Niranjan; Antje Gruenwald; Seonho Ahn; Hideki Kato; James Pullman; Manfred Gessler; Volker H. Haase; Katalin Susztak

Chronic kidney disease is a leading cause of death in the United States. Tubulointerstitial fibrosis (TIF) is considered the final common pathway leading to end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Here, we used pharmacologic, genetic, in vivo, and in vitro experiments to show that activation of the Notch pathway in tubular epithelial cells (TECs) in patients and in mouse models of TIF plays a role in TIF development. Expression of Notch in renal TECs was found to be both necessary and sufficient for TIF development. Genetic deletion of the Notch pathway in TECs reduced renal fibrosis. Consistent with this, TEC-specific expression of active Notch1 caused rapid development of TIF. Pharmacologic inhibition of Notch activation using a γ-secretase inhibitor ameliorated TIF. In summary, our experiments establish that epithelial injury and Notch signaling play key roles in fibrosis development and indicate that Notch blockade may be a therapeutic strategy to reduce fibrosis and ESRD development.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Defective fatty acid oxidation in renal tubular epithelial cells has a key role in kidney fibrosis development

Hyun Mi Kang; Seon Ho Ahn; Peter Choi; Yi An Ko; Seung Hyeok Han; Frank Chinga; Ae Seo Deok Park; Jianling Tao; Kumar Sharma; James Pullman; Erwin P. Bottinger; Ira J. Goldberg; Katalin Susztak

Renal fibrosis is the histological manifestation of a progressive, usually irreversible process causing chronic and end-stage kidney disease. We performed genome-wide transcriptome studies of a large cohort (n = 95) of normal and fibrotic human kidney tubule samples followed by systems and network analyses and identified inflammation and metabolism as the top dysregulated pathways in the diseased kidneys. In particular, we found that humans and mouse models with tubulointerstitial fibrosis had lower expression of key enzymes and regulators of fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and higher intracellular lipid deposition compared to controls. In vitro experiments indicated that inhibition of FAO in tubule epithelial cells caused ATP depletion, cell death, dedifferentiation and intracellular lipid deposition, phenotypes observed in fibrosis. In contrast, restoring fatty acid metabolism by genetic or pharmacological methods protected mice from tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Our results raise the possibility that correcting the metabolic defect in FAO may be useful for preventing and treating chronic kidney disease.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Molecular mechanisms of diabetic kidney disease

Kimberly Reidy; Hyun Mi Kang; Thomas H. Hostetter; Katalin Susztak

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is the leading cause of kidney failure worldwide and the single strongest predictor of mortality in patients with diabetes. DKD is a prototypical disease of gene and environmental interactions. Tight glucose control significantly decreases DKD incidence, indicating that hyperglycemia-induced metabolic alterations, including changes in energy utilization and mitochondrial dysfunction, play critical roles in disease initiation. Blood pressure control, especially with medications that inhibit the angiotensin system, is the only effective way to slow disease progression. While DKD is considered a microvascular complication of diabetes, growing evidence indicates that podocyte loss and epithelial dysfunction play important roles. Inflammation, cell hypertrophy, and dedifferentiation by the activation of classic pathways of regeneration further contribute to disease progression. Concerted clinical and basic research efforts will be needed to understand DKD pathogenesis and to identify novel drug targets.


Diabetes | 2011

Transcriptome Analysis of Human Diabetic Kidney Disease

Karolina I. Woroniecka; Ae Seo Deok Park; Davoud Mohtat; David B. Thomas; James Pullman; Katalin Susztak

OBJECTIVE Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is the single leading cause of kidney failure in the U.S., for which a cure has not yet been found. The aim of our study was to provide an unbiased catalog of gene-expression changes in human diabetic kidney biopsy samples. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Affymetrix expression arrays were used to identify differentially regulated transcripts in 44 microdissected human kidney samples. DKD samples were significant for their racial diversity and decreased glomerular filtration rate (~25–35 mL/min). Stringent statistical analysis, using the Benjamini-Hochberg corrected two-tailed t test, was used to identify differentially expressed transcripts in control and diseased glomeruli and tubuli. Two different web-based algorithms were used to define differentially regulated pathways. RESULTS We identified 1,700 differentially expressed probesets in DKD glomeruli and 1,831 in diabetic tubuli, and 330 probesets were commonly differentially expressed in both compartments. Pathway analysis highlighted the regulation of Ras homolog gene family member A, Cdc42, integrin, integrin-linked kinase, and vascular endothelial growth factor signaling in DKD glomeruli. The tubulointerstitial compartment showed strong enrichment for inflammation-related pathways. The canonical complement signaling pathway was determined to be statistically differentially regulated in both DKD glomeruli and tubuli and was associated with increased glomerulosclerosis even in a different set of DKD samples. CONCLUSIONS Our studies have cataloged gene-expression regulation and identified multiple novel genes and pathways that may play a role in the pathogenesis of DKD or could serve as biomarkers.


PLOS Medicine | 2005

Multiple Metabolic Hits Converge on CD36 as Novel Mediator of Tubular Epithelial Apoptosis in Diabetic Nephropathy

Katalin Susztak; Emilio Ciccone; Peter McCue; Kumar Sharma; Erwin P. Bottinger

Background Diabetic nephropathy (DNP) is a common complication of type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus and the most common cause of kidney failure. While DNP manifests with albuminuria and diabetic glomerulopathy, its progression correlates best with tubular epithelial degeneration (TED) and interstitial fibrosis. However, mechanisms leading to TED in DNP remain poorly understood. Methods and Findings We found that expression of scavenger receptor CD36 coincided with proximal tubular epithelial cell (PTEC) apoptosis and TED specifically in human DNP. High glucose stimulated cell surface expression of CD36 in PTECs. CD36 expression was necessary and sufficient to mediate PTEC apoptosis induced by glycated albumins (AGE-BSA and CML-BSA) and free fatty acid palmitate through sequential activation of src kinase, and proapoptotic p38 MAPK and caspase 3. In contrast, paucity of expression of CD36 in PTECs in diabetic mice with diabetic glomerulopathy was associated with normal tubular epithelium and the absence of tubular apoptosis. Mouse PTECs lacked CD36 and were resistant to AGE-BSA-induced apoptosis. Recombinant expression of CD36 in mouse PTECs conferred susceptibility to AGE-BSA-induced apoptosis. Conclusion Our findings suggest a novel role for CD36 as an essential mediator of proximal tubular apoptosis in human DNP. Because CD36 expression was induced by glucose in PTECs, and because increased CD36 mediated AGE-BSA-, CML-BSA-, and palmitate-induced PTEC apoptosis, we propose a two-step metabolic hit model for TED, a hallmark of progression in DNP.


Autophagy | 2012

Emerging role of autophagy in kidney function, diseases and aging

Tobias B. Huber; Charles L. Edelstein; Björn Hartleben; Ken Inoki; Man Jiang; Daisuke Koya; Shinji Kume; Wilfred Lieberthal; Nicolas Pallet; Alejandro Quiroga; Kameswaran Ravichandran; Katalin Susztak; Sei Yoshida; Zheng Dong

Autophagy is a highly conserved process that degrades cellular long-lived proteins and organelles. Accumulating evidence indicates that autophagy plays a critical role in kidney maintenance, diseases and aging. Ischemic, toxic, immunological, and oxidative insults can cause an induction of autophagy in renal epithelial cells modifying the course of various kidney diseases. This review summarizes recent insights on the role of autophagy in kidney physiology and diseases alluding to possible novel intervention strategies for treating specific kidney disorders by modifying autophagy.


Genome Biology | 2013

Cytosine methylation changes in enhancer regions of core pro-fibrotic genes characterize kidney fibrosis development

Yi-An Ko; Davoud Mohtat; Masako Suzuki; Ae Seo Deok Park; María Concepción Izquierdo; Sang Youb Han; Hyun Mi Kang; Han Si; Thomas H. Hostetter; James Pullman; Melissa Fazzari; Amit Verma; Deyou Zheng; John M. Greally; Katalin Susztak

BackgroundOne in eleven people is affected by chronic kidney disease, a condition characterized by kidney fibrosis and progressive loss of kidney function. Epidemiological studies indicate that adverse intrauterine and postnatal environments have a long-lasting role in chronic kidney disease development. Epigenetic information represents a plausible carrier for mediating this programming effect. Here we demonstrate that genome-wide cytosine methylation patterns of healthy and chronic kidney disease tubule samples obtained from patients show significant differences.ResultsWe identify differentially methylated regions and validate these in a large replication dataset. The differentially methylated regions are rarely observed on promoters, but mostly overlap with putative enhancer regions, and they are enriched in consensus binding sequences for important renal transcription factors. This indicates their importance in gene expression regulation. A core set of genes that are known to be related to kidney fibrosis, including genes encoding collagens, show cytosine methylation changes correlating with downstream transcript levels.ConclusionsOur report raises the possibility that epigenetic dysregulation plays a role in chronic kidney disease development via influencing core pro-fibrotic pathways and can aid the development of novel biomarkers and future therapeutics.


Kidney International | 2010

Expression of Notch pathway proteins correlates with albuminuria, glomerulosclerosis, and renal function

Mariana Murea; Jun Ki Park; Shuchita Sharma; Hideki Kato; Antje Gruenwald; Thiruvur Niranjan; Han Si; David B. Thomas; James Pullman; Michal L. Melamed; Katalin Susztak

Recent studies indicate that the Notch signaling pathway plays an important role in the development of diabetic kidney disease and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Here we analyzed the degree of expression and localization of Notch ligands (Jagged1 and Delta1) and activated (cleaved) receptors (Notch1 and Notch2) in healthy human kidneys and in renal biopsies from a wide variety of kidney diseases. These included patients with minimal change disease, membranous nephropathy, lupus nephritis ISN/RPS classes III/IV/V, hypertensive nephrosclerosis, crescentic glomerulonephritis, tubulointerstitial fibrosis, IgA nephropathy, diabetic kidney disease, and FSGS. We found that cleaved Notch1, Notch2, and Jagged1 are expressed on podocytes in proteinuric nephropathies and their level of expression correlated with the amount of proteinuria across all disease groups. The degree of glomerulosclerosis correlated with podocyte expression of cleaved Notch1, while the severity of tubulointerstitial fibrosis and the estimated glomerular filtration rate correlated with expression of cleaved Notch1 in the tubulointerstitium. Hence, our results raise the possibility that Notch pathway activation is a common mechanism in the pathophysiology of a wide range of acquired renal diseases.

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Jihwan Park

University of Pennsylvania

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Chengxiang Qiu

University of Pennsylvania

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Yi-An Ko

University of Pennsylvania

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James Pullman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Ae Seo Deok Park

University of Pennsylvania

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Erwin P. Bottinger

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Shizheng Huang

University of Pennsylvania

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Thiruvur Niranjan

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Kumar Sharma

University of California

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Matthew Palmer

University of Pennsylvania

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