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Dive into the research topics where Larysa Wickman is active.

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Featured researches published by Larysa Wickman.


Kidney International | 2012

Angiotensin II-dependent persistent podocyte loss from destabilized glomeruli causes progression of end stage kidney disease

Akihiro Fukuda; Larysa Wickman; Madhusudan Venkatareddy; Yuji Sato; Mahboob Chowdhury; Su Q. Wang; Kerby Shedden; Robert C. Dysko; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Roger C. Wiggins

Podocyte depletion is a major mechanism driving glomerulosclerosis. Progression is the process by which progressive glomerulosclerosis leads to end stage kidney disease (ESKD). In order to determine mechanisms contributing to persistent podocyte loss, we used a human diphtheria toxin transgenic rat model. After initial diphtheria toxin-induced podocyte injury (over 30% loss in 4 weeks), glomeruli became destabilized, resulting in continued autonomous podocyte loss causing global podocyte depletion (ESKD) by 13 weeks. This was monitored by urine mRNA analysis and by quantitating podocytes in glomeruli. Similar patterns of podocyte depletion were found in the puromycin aminonucleoside and 5/6 nephrectomy rat models of progressive end-stage disease. Angiotensin II blockade (combined enalapril and losartan) restabilized the glomeruli, and prevented continuous podocyte loss and progression to ESKD. Discontinuing angiotensin II blockade resulted in recurrent glomerular destabilization, podocyte loss, and progression to ESKD. Reduction in blood pressure alone did not reduce proteinuria or prevent podocyte loss from destabilized glomeruli. The protective effect of angiotensin II blockade was entirely accounted for by reduced podocyte loss. Thus, an initiating event resulting in a critical degree of podocyte depletion can destabilize glomeruli and initiate a superimposed angiotensin II-dependent podocyte loss process that accelerates progression resulting in eventual global podocyte depletion and ESKD. These events can be monitored noninvasively in real-time through urine mRNA assays.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2012

Growth-Dependent Podocyte Failure Causes Glomerulosclerosis

Akihiro Fukuda; Mahboob Chowdhury; Madhusudan Venkatareddy; Su Q. Wang; Ryuzoh Nishizono; Tsukasa Suzuki; Larysa Wickman; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Timothy Muchayi; Diane C. Fingar; Kerby Shedden; Ken Inoki; Roger C. Wiggins

Podocyte depletion leads to glomerulosclerosis, but whether an impaired capacity of podocytes to respond to hypertrophic stress also causes glomerulosclerosis is unknown. We generated transgenic Fischer 344 rats that express a dominant negative AA-4E-BP1 transgene driven by the podocin promoter; a member of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway, 4E-BP1 modulates cap-dependent translation, which is a key determinant of a cells hypertrophic response to nutrients and growth factors. AA-4E-BP1 rat podocytes expressed the transgene and had normal kidney histology and protein excretion at 100 g of body weight but developed ESRD by 12 months. Proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis were linearly related to both increasing body weight and transgene dose. Uni-nephrectomy reduced the body weight at which proteinuria first developed by 40%-50%. The initial histologic manifestation of disease was the appearance of bare areas of glomerular basement membrane from the pulling apart of podocyte foot processes, followed by adhesions to the Bowman capsule. Morphometric analysis confirmed the mismatch between glomerular tuft volume and total podocyte volume (number × size) per tuft in relation to weight gain and nephrectomy. Proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis did not develop if dietary calorie restriction prevented weight gain and glomerular enlargement. In summary, failure of podocytes to match glomerular tuft growth in response to growth signaling through the mTORC1 pathway can trigger proteinuria, glomerulosclerosis, and progression to ESRD. Reducing body weight and glomerular growth may be useful adjunctive therapies to slow or prevent progression to ESRD.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

Urine Podocyte mRNAs, Proteinuria, and Progression in Human Glomerular Diseases

Larysa Wickman; Farsad Afshinnia; Su Q. Wang; Yan Yang; Fei Wang; Mahboob Chowdhury; Delia Graham; Jennifer Hawkins; Ryuzoh Nishizono; Marie Tanzer; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Guillermo A. Escobar; Bradley Rovin; Peter X.-K. Song; Debbie S. Gipson; David B. Kershaw; Roger C. Wiggins

Model systems demonstrate that progression to ESRD is driven by progressive podocyte depletion (the podocyte depletion hypothesis) and can be noninvasively monitored through measurement of urine pellet podocyte mRNAs. To test these concepts in humans, we analyzed urine pellet mRNAs from 358 adult and pediatric kidney clinic patients and 291 controls (n=1143 samples). Compared with controls, urine podocyte mRNAs increased 79-fold (P<0.001) in patients with biopsy-proven glomerular disease and a 50% decrease in kidney function or progression to ESRD. An independent cohort of patients with Alport syndrome had a 23-fold increase in urinary podocyte mRNAs (P<0.001 compared with controls). Urinary podocyte mRNAs increased during active disease but returned to baseline on disease remission. Furthermore, urine podocyte mRNAs increased in all categories of glomerular disease evaluated, but levels ranged from high to normal, consistent with individual patient variability in the risk for progression. In contrast, urine podocyte mRNAs did not increase in polycystic kidney disease. The association between proteinuria and podocyturia varied markedly by glomerular disease type: a high correlation in minimal-change disease and a low correlation in membranous nephropathy. These data support the podocyte depletion hypothesis as the mechanism driving progression in all human glomerular diseases, suggest that urine pellet podocyte mRNAs could be useful for monitoring risk for progression and response to treatment, and provide novel insights into glomerular disease pathophysiology.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2012

Urine podocin:nephrin mRNA ratio (PNR) as a podocyte stress biomarker

Akihiro Fukuda; Larysa Wickman; Madhusudan Venkatareddy; Su Q. Wang; Mahboob Chowdhury; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Kerby Shedden; Roger C. Wiggins

BACKGROUND Proteinuria and/or albuminuria are widely used for noninvasive assessment of kidney diseases. However, proteinuria is a nonspecific marker of diverse forms of kidney injury, physiologic processes and filtration of small proteins of monoclonal and other pathologic processes. The opportunity to develop new glomerular disease biomarkers follows the realization that the degree of podocyte depletion determines the degree of glomerulosclerosis, and if persistent, determines the progression to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). Podocyte cell lineage-specific mRNAs can be recovered in urine pellets of model systems and in humans. In model systems, progressive glomerular disease is associated with decreased nephrin mRNA steady-state levels compared with podocin mRNA. Thus, the urine podocin:nephrin mRNA ratio (PNR) could serve as a useful progression biomarker. The use of podocyte-specific transcript ratios also circumvents many problems inherent to urine assays. METHODS To test this hypothesis, the human diphtheria toxin receptor (hDTR) rat model of progression was used to evaluate potentially useful urine mRNA biomarkers. We compared histologic progression parameters (glomerulosclerosis score, interstitial fibrosis score and percent of podocyte depletion) with clinical biomarkers [serum creatinine, systolic blood pressure (BP), 24-h urine volume, 24-h urine protein excretion and the urine protein:creatinine ratio(PCR)] and with the novel urine mRNA biomarkers. RESULTS The PNR correlated with histologic outcome as well or better than routine clinical biomarkers and other urine mRNA biomarkers in the model system with high specificity and sensitivity, and a low coefficient of assay variation. CONCLUSIONS We concluded that the PNR, used in combination with proteinuria, will be worth testing for its clinical diagnostic and decision-making utility.


BMC Nephrology | 2011

Novel therapies for resistant focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FONT) phase II clinical trial: study design

Howard Trachtman; Suzanne Vento; Debbie S. Gipson; Larysa Wickman; Jennifer Gassman; Melanie S. Joy; Virginia J. Savin; Michael J. Somers; Maury Pinsk; Tom Greene

BackgroundThe lack of adequate randomized clinical trials (RCT) has hindered identification of new therapies that are safe and effective for patients with primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), especially in patients who fail to respond to corticosteroids and immunosuppressive therapies. Recent basic science advances have led to development of alternative treatments that specifically target aberrant pathways of fibrosis which are relevant to disease progression in FSGS. There is a need for a flexible Phase II study design which will test such novel antifibrotic strategies in order to identify agents suitable for phase III testing.Methods/DesignThe Novel Therapies for Resistant Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis (FONT) project is a multicenter Phase I/II RCT designed to investigate the potential efficacy of novel therapies for resistant FSGS. Adalimumab and galactose will be evaluated against conservative therapy consisting of the combination of lisinopril, losartan and atorvastatin. The sample size is defined to assure that if one of the treatments has a superior response rate compared to that of the other treatments, it will be selected with high probability for further evaluation. Comparison of primary and secondary endpoints in each study arm will enable a choice to be made of which treatments are worthy of further study in future Phase III RCT.DiscussionThis report highlights the key features of the FONT II RCT including the two-step outcome analysis that will expedite achievement of the study objectives. The proposed phase II study design will help to identify promising agents for further testing while excluding ineffective agents. This staged approach can help to prevent large expenditures on unworthy therapeutic agents in the management of serious but rare kidney diseasesTrial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00814255


Seminars in Nephrology | 2015

Podometrics as a Potential Clinical Tool for Glomerular Disease Management

Masao Kikuchi; Larysa Wickman; Jeffrey B. Hodgin; Roger C. Wiggins

Chronic kidney disease culminating in end-stage kidney disease is a major public health problem costing in excess of


PLOS ONE | 2016

Podocyte Depletion in Thin GBM and Alport Syndrome

Larysa Wickman; Jeffrey B. Hodgin; Su Q. Wang; Farsad Afshinnia; David B. Kershaw; Roger C. Wiggins

40 billion per year with high morbidity and mortality. Current tools for glomerular disease monitoring lack precision and contribute to poor outcome. The podocyte depletion hypothesis describes the major mechanisms underlying the progression of glomerular diseases, which are responsible for more than 80% of cases of end-stage kidney disease. The question arises of whether this new knowledge can be used to improve outcomes and reduce costs. Podocytes have unique characteristics that make them an attractive monitoring tool. Methodologies for estimating podocyte number, size, density, glomerular volume and other parameters in routine kidney biopsies, and the rate of podocyte detachment from glomeruli into urine (podometrics) now have been developed and validated. They potentially fill important gaps in the glomerular disease monitoring toolbox. The application of these tools to glomerular disease groups shows good correlation with outcome, although data validating their use for individual decision making is not yet available. Given the urgency of the clinical problem, we argue that the time has come to focus on testing these tools for application to individualized clinical decision making toward more effective progression prevention.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2013

Inpatient Health Care Utilization by Children and Adolescents With Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Kidney Involvement

Marie Tanzer; Cheryl L. Tran; Kassandra L. Messer; Amber Kroeker; Emily Herreshoff; Larysa Wickman; Courtney Harkness; Peter X.-K. Song; Debbie S. Gipson

The proximate genetic cause of both Thin GBM and Alport Syndrome (AS) is abnormal α3, 4 and 5 collagen IV chains resulting in abnormal glomerular basement membrane (GBM) structure/function. We previously reported that podocyte detachment rate measured in urine is increased in AS, suggesting that podocyte depletion could play a role in causing progressive loss of kidney function. To test this hypothesis podometric parameters were measured in 26 kidney biopsies from 21 patients aged 2–17 years with a clinic-pathologic diagnosis including both classic Alport Syndrome with thin and thick GBM segments and lamellated lamina densa [n = 15] and Thin GBM cases [n = 6]. Protocol biopsies from deceased donor kidneys were used as age-matched controls. Podocyte depletion was present in AS biopsies prior to detectable histologic abnormalities. No abnormality was detected by light microscopy at <30% podocyte depletion, minor pathologic changes (mesangial expansion and adhesions to Bowman’s capsule) were present at 30–50% podocyte depletion, and FSGS was progressively present above 50% podocyte depletion. eGFR did not change measurably until >70% podocyte depletion. Low level proteinuria was an early event at about 25% podocyte depletion and increased in proportion to podocyte depletion. These quantitative data parallel those from model systems where podocyte depletion is the causative event. This result supports a hypothesis that in AS podocyte adherence to the GBM is defective resulting in accelerated podocyte detachment causing progressive podocyte depletion leading to FSGS-like pathologic changes and eventual End Stage Kidney Disease. Early intervention to reduce podocyte depletion is projected to prolong kidney survival in AS.


JCI insight | 2016

Quantitative podocyte parameters predict human native kidney and allograft half-lives

Abhijit S. Naik; Farsad Afshinnia; Diane M. Cibrik; Jeffrey B. Hodgin; Fan Wu; Min Zhang; Masao Kikuchi; Larysa Wickman; M. Samaniego; Markus Bitzer; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Akinlolu Ojo; Yi Li; Roger C. Wiggins

To evaluate inpatient health care utilization for children with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) with and without kidney disease.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017

FSGS as an Adaptive Response to Growth-Induced Podocyte Stress

Ryuzoh Nishizono; Masao Kikuchi; Su Q. Wang; Mahboob Chowdhury; Viji Nair; John W. Hartman; Akihiro Fukuda; Larysa Wickman; Jeffrey B. Hodgin; Markus Bitzer; Abhijit S. Naik; Jocelyn E. Wiggins; Matthias Kretzler; Roger C. Wiggins

BACKGROUND Kidney function decreases with age. A potential mechanistic explanation for kidney and allograft half-life has evolved through the realization that linear reduction in glomerular podocyte density could drive progressive glomerulosclerosis to impact both native kidney and allograft half-lives. METHODS Predictions from podometrics (quantitation of podocyte parameters) were tested using independent pathologic, functional, and outcome data for native kidneys and allografts derived from published reports and large registries. RESULTS With age, native kidneys exponentially develop glomerulosclerosis, reduced renal function, and end-stage kidney disease, projecting a finite average kidney life span. The slope of allograft failure rate versus age parallels that of reduction in podocyte density versus age. Quantitative modeling projects allograft half-life at any donor age, and rate of podocyte detachment parallels the observed allograft loss rate. CONCLUSION Native kidneys are designed to have a limited average life span of about 100-140 years. Allografts undergo an accelerated aging-like process that accounts for their unexpectedly short half-life (about 15 years), the observation that older donor age is associated with shorter allograft half-life, and the fact that long-term allograft survival has not substantially improved. Podometrics provides potential readouts for these processes, thereby offering new approaches for monitoring and intervention. FUNDING National Institutes of Health.

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Su Q. Wang

University of Michigan

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