Malgorzata Kasztan
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Featured researches published by Malgorzata Kasztan.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Agnieszka Piwkowska; Dorota Rogacka; Malgorzata Kasztan; Stefan Angielski; Maciej Jankowski
The increase in the permeability of the glomerular barrier filtration to albumin is a well-known feature of diabetic microvasculature and a negative prognostic factor for vascular complications. However, the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. We demonstrated recently that superoxide anion generation increases dimerization of protein kinase G type Iα (PKGIα) subunits, leading to podocyte dysfunction. Here we investigated whether high insulin concentration is involved in PKGI-dependent hyperpermeability of the diabetic glomerular filtration barrier. We assessed changes in insulin-induced glomerular permeability by measuring glomerular capillary permeability to albumin in isolated glomeruli from Wistar and obese and lean Zucker rats and transmembrane albumin flux in cultured rat podocytes. Expression of PKGIα and upstream proteins was confirmed in the podocytes using Western blotting and immunofluorescence. Insulin (300nM, 5min) increased NAD(P)H-dependent glomerular albumin permeability in Wistar rats and PKGI-dependent transmembrane albumin flux in cultured podocytes. Podocyte exposure to insulin in non-reducing conditions increased PKGIα interprotein disulfide bond formation, altered the phosphorylation of the PKG target proteins MYPT1 and MLC, and disrupted the actin cytoskeleton. The role of NADPH oxidase (NOX) in insulin-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and insulin-evoked increases in albumin permeability in podocytes was confirmed with NOX2 and NOX4 siRNA. Glomerular albumin permeability was increased in hyperinsulinemic Zucker obese rats with isolated glomeruli showing increased expression of PKGIα and NOX4. Taken together, these data demonstrate that insulin increases glomerular barrier albumin permeability via a PKGI-dependent mechanism involving NAD(P)H-dependent generation of superoxide anion. These findings reveal a role for insulin in the pathophysiology of diabetic glomerular nephropathy.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017
Malgorzata Kasztan; Brandon M. Fox; Joshua S. Speed; Carmen De Miguel; Eman Y. Gohar; Tim M. Townes; Abdullah Kutlar; Jennifer S. Pollock; David M. Pollock
Sickle cell disease (SCD)-associated nephropathy is a major source of morbidity and mortality in patients because of the lack of efficacious treatments targeting renal manifestations of the disease. Here, we describe a long-term treatment strategy with the selective endothelin-A receptor (ETA) antagonist, ambrisentan, designed to interfere with the development of nephropathy in a humanized mouse model of SCD. Ambrisentan preserved GFR at the level of nondisease controls and prevented the development of proteinuria, albuminuria, and nephrinuria. Microscopy studies demonstrated prevention of podocyte loss and structural alterations, the absence of vascular congestion, and attenuation of glomerulosclerosis in treated mice. Studies in isolated glomeruli showed that treatment reduced inflammation and oxidative stress. At the level of renal tubules, ambrisentan treatment prevented the increased excretion of urinary tubular injury biomarkers. Additionally, the treatment strategy prevented tubular brush border loss, diminished tubular iron deposition, blocked the development of interstitial fibrosis, and prevented immune cell infiltration. Furthermore, the prevention of albuminuria in treated mice was associated with preservation of cortical megalin expression. In a separate series of identical experiments, combined ETA and ETB receptor antagonism provided only some of the protection observed with ambrisentan, highlighting the importance of exclusively targeting the ETA receptor in SCD. Our results demonstrate that ambrisentan treatment provides robust protection from diverse renal pathologies in SCD mice, and suggest that long-term ETA receptor antagonism may provide a strategy for the prevention of renal complications of SCD.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Agnieszka Piwkowska; Dorota Rogacka; Irena Audzeyenka; Malgorzata Kasztan; Stefan Angielski; Maciej Jankowski
Podocytes are highly specialized cells that wrap around glomerular capillaries and comprise a key component of the glomerular filtration barrier. They are uniquely sensitive to insulin; like skeletal muscle and fat cells, they exhibit insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and express glucose transporters. Podocyte insulin signaling is mediated by protein kinase G type I (PKGI), and it leads to changes in glomerular permeability to albumin. Here, we investigated whether large-conductance Ca²⁺-activated K⁺ channels (BKCa) were involved in insulin-mediated, PKGIα-dependent filtration barrier permeability. Insulin-induced glomerular permeability was measured in glomeruli isolated from Wistar rats. Transepithelial albumin flux was measured in cultured rat podocyte monolayers. Expression of BKCa subunits was detected by RT-PCR. BKCa, PKGIα, and upstream protein expression were examined in podocytes with Western blotting and immunofluorescence. The BKCa-PKGIα interaction was assessed with co-immunoprecipitation. RT-PCR showed that primary cultured rat podocytes expressed mRNAs that encoded the pore-forming α subunit and four accessory β subunits of BKCa. The BKCa inhibitor, iberiotoxin (ibTX), abolished insulin-dependent glomerular albumin permeability and PKGI-dependent transepithelial albumin flux. Insulin-evoked albumin permeability across podocyte monolayers was also blocked with BKCa siRNA. Moreover, ibTX blocked insulin-induced disruption of the actin cytoskeleton and changes in the phosphorylation of PKG target proteins, MYPT1 and RhoA. These results indicated that insulin increased filtration barrier permeability through mobilization of BKCa channels via PKGI in cultured rat podocytes. This molecular mechanism may explain podocyte injury and proteinuria in diabetes.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2016
Malgorzata Kasztan; Agnieszka Piwkowska; Ewelina Kreft; Dorota Rogacka; Irena Audzeyenka; Miroslawa Szczepanska-Konkel; Maciej Jankowski
Purinoceptors (adrengeric receptors and P2 receptors) are expressed on the cellular components of the glomerular filtration barrier, and their activation may affect glomerular permeability to albumin, which may ultimately lead to albuminuria, a well-established risk factor for the progression of chronic kidney disease and development of cardiovascular diseases. We investigated the mechanisms underlying the in vitro and in vivo purinergic actions on glomerular filter permeability to albumin by measuring convectional albumin permeability (Palb) in a single isolated rat glomerulus based on the video microscopy method. Primary cultured rat podocytes were used for the analysis of Palb, cGMP accumulation, PKG-Iα dimerization, and immunofluorescence. In vitro, natural nucleotides (ATP, ADP, UTP, and UDP) and nonmetabolized ATP analogs (2-meSATP and ATP-γ-S) increased Palb in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. The effects were dependent on P2 receptor activation, nitric oxide synthase, and cytoplasmic guanylate cyclase. ATP analogs significantly increased Palb, cGMP accumulation, and subcortical actin reorganization in a PKG-dependent but nondimer-mediated route in cultured podocytes. In vivo, 2-meSATP and ATP-γ-S increased Palb but did not significantly affect urinary albumin excretion. Both agonists enhanced the clathrin-mediated endocytosis of albumin in podocytes. A product of adenine nucleotides hydrolysis, adenosine, increased the permeability of the glomerular barrier via adrenergic receptors in a dependent and independent manner. Our results suggest that the extracellular nucleotides that stimulate an increase of glomerular Palb involve nitric oxide synthase and cytoplasmic guanylate cyclase with actin reorganization in podocytes.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2018
Joshua S. Speed; Kelly A. Hyndman; Kaehler J. Roth; Jonathan Heimlich; Malgorzata Kasztan; Brandon M. Fox; Jermaine G. Johnston; Bryan K. Becker; Chunhua Jin; Karen L. Gamble; Martin E. Young; Jennifer S. Pollock; David M. Pollock
Speed JS, Hyndman KA, Roth K, Heimlich JB, Kasztan M, Fox BM, Johnston JG, Becker BK, Jin C, Gamble KL, Young ME, Pollock JS, Pollock DM. High dietary sodium causes dyssynchrony of the renal molecular clock in rats. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 314: F89-F98, 2018. First published September 27, 2017; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00028.2017.-Dyssynchrony of circadian rhythms is associated with various disorders, including cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. The cell autonomous molecular clock maintains circadian control; however, environmental factors that may cause circadian dyssynchrony either within or between organ systems are poorly understood. Our laboratory recently reported that the endothelin (ET-1) B (ETB) receptor functions to facilitate Na+ excretion in a time of day-dependent manner. Therefore, the present study was designed to determine whether high salt (HS) intake leads to circadian dyssynchrony within the kidney and whether the renal endothelin system contributes to control of the renal molecular clock. We observed that HS feeding led to region-specific alterations in circadian clock components within the kidney. For instance, HS caused a significant 5.5-h phase delay in the peak expression of Bmal1 and suppressed Cry1 and Per2 expression in the renal inner medulla, but not the renal cortex, of control rats. The phase delay in Bmal1 expression appears to be mediated by ET-1 because this phenomenon was not observed in the ETB-deficient rat. In cultured inner medullary collecting duct cells, ET-1 suppressed Bmal1 mRNA expression. Furthermore, Bmal1 knockdown in these cells reduced epithelial Na+ channel expression. These data reveal that HS feeding leads to intrarenal circadian dyssynchrony mediated, in part, through activation of ETB receptors within the renal inner medulla.
Life Sciences | 2016
Brandon M. Fox; Malgorzata Kasztan
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic hematologic disorder that is characterized by a variety of potentially life threatening acute and chronic complications. Currently, hydroxyurea is the only clinically approved pharmacological therapy for the treatment of SCD, and the continued prevalence of severe disease complications underscores the desperate need for the development of new therapeutic agents. Central features of the sickle cell disease milieu, including hypoxia, oxidative stress, and thrombosis, are established enhancers of endothelin-1 (ET-1) synthesis. This conceptual connection between ET-1 and SCD was confirmed by multiple studies that demonstrated markedly elevated plasma and urinary levels of ET-1 in SCD patients. Direct evidence for the involvement of ET-1 signaling in the development of SCD pathologies has come from studies using endothelin receptor antagonists in SCD mice. This review summarizes recent studies that have implicated ET-1 signaling as a mechanistic contributor to renal, vascular, pulmonary, and nociceptive complications of sickle cell disease and discusses the potential for the use of ET receptor antagonists in the treatment of SCD.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2018
Joshua S. Speed; Kelly A. Hyndman; Malgorzata Kasztan; Jermaine G. Johnston; Kaehler J. Roth; Jens M. Titze; David M. Pollock
Impairment in the ability of the skin to properly store Na+ nonosmotically (without water) has recently been hypothesized as contributing to salt-sensitive hypertension. Our laboratory has shown that endothelial production of endothelin-1 (ET-1) is crucial to skin Na+ handling. Furthermore, it is well established that loss of endothelin type B receptor (ETB) receptor function impairs Na+ excretion by the kidney. Thus we hypothesized that rats lacking functional ETB receptors (ETB-def) will have a reduced capacity of the skin to store Na+ during chronic high-salt (HS) intake. We observed that ETB-def rats exhibited salt-sensitive hypertension with an approximate doubling in the diurnal amplitude of mean arterial pressure compared with genetic control rats on a HS diet. Two weeks of HS diet significantly increased skin Na+ content relative to water; however, there was no significant difference between control and ETB-def rats. Interestingly, HS intake led to a 19% increase in skin Na+ and 16% increase in water content (relative to dry wt.) during the active phase (zeitgeber time 16) versus inactive phase (zeitgeber time 4, P < 0.05) in ETB-def rats. There was no significant circadian variation in total skin Na+ or water content of control rats fed normal or HS. These data indicate that ETB receptors have little influence on the ability to store Na+ nonosmotically in the skin during long-term HS intake but, rather, appear to regulate diurnal rhythms in skin Na+ content and circadian blood pressure rhythms associated with a HS diet.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Dorota Rogacka; Irena Audzeyenka; Patrycja Rachubik; Michał Rychłowski; Malgorzata Kasztan; Maciej Jankowski; Stefan Angielski; Agnieszka Piwkowska
Podocytes are dynamic polarized cells on the surface of glomerular capillaries and an essential component of the glomerular filtration barrier. Insulin increases the activation of protein kinase G type Iα (PKGIα) subunits, leading to podocyte dysfunction. In addition, accumulating evidence suggests that TRPC6 channels are crucial mediators of podocyte calcium handling and involved in the regulation of glomerular filtration. Therefore, we investigated whether TRPC6 is involved in the regulation of filtration barrier permeability by insulin via the PKGIα-dependent manner. TRPC channel inhibitor SKF96365 abolished insulin-dependent glomerular albumin permeability and transepithelial albumin flux in cultured rat podocytes. Insulin-evoked albumin permeability across podocyte monolayers was also blocked using TRPC6 siRNA. The effect of insulin on albumin permeability was mimicked by treating podocytes with TRPC channel activator (oleolyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol, OAG). Insulin or OAG treatment rapidly increased the superoxide generation through activation of NADH oxidase. TRPC inhibitor SKF96365 or siRNA knockdown of TRPC6 attenuated insulin-dependent increase of ROS production. Furthermore, TRPC inhibitor or downregulation of TRPC6 blocked insulin-induced rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton and attenuated oxidative activation of PKGIα and changes in the phosphorylation of PKG target proteins MYPT1 and MLC. Moreover insulin regulated the PKGIα interaction with TRPC6 in cultured rat podocytes. Taken together, our data suggest a key role of TRPC6 channels in the mediation of insulin-dependent activation of PKGIα signaling pathways. Overall, we have identified a potentially important mechanism that may explain disturbances in filtration barrier permeability in many diseases with increased expression of TRPC6 and chronic Ca2+ overload.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2017
Bryan K. Becker; Amanda C. Feagans; Daian Chen; Malgorzata Kasztan; Chunhua Jin; Joshua S. Speed; Jennifer S. Pollock; David M. Pollock
Hypertension is a prevalent pathology that increases risk for numerous cardiovascular diseases. Because the etiology of hypertension varies across patients, specific and effective therapeutic approaches are needed. The role of renal sympathetic nerves is established in numerous forms of hypertension, but their contribution to salt sensitivity and interaction with factors such as endothelin-1 are poorly understood. Rats deficient of functional ETB receptors (ETB-def) on all tissues except sympathetic nerves are hypertensive and exhibit salt-sensitive increases in blood pressure. We hypothesized that renal sympathetic nerves contribute to hypertension and salt sensitivity in ETB-def rats. The hypothesis was tested through bilateral renal sympathetic nerve denervation and measuring blood pressure during normal salt (0.49% NaCl) and high-salt (4.0% NaCl) diets. Denervation reduced mean arterial pressure in ETB-def rats compared with sham-operated controls by 12 ± 3 (SE) mmHg; however, denervation did not affect the increase in blood pressure after 2 wk of high-salt diet (+19 ± 3 vs. +16 ± 3 mmHg relative to normal salt diet; denervated vs. sham, respectively). Denervation reduced cardiac sympathetic-to-parasympathetic tone [low frequency-high frequency (LF/HF)] during normal salt diet and vasomotor LF/HF tone during high-salt diet in ETB-def rats. We conclude that the renal sympathetic nerves contribute to the hypertension but not to salt sensitivity of ETB-def rats.
FEBS Letters | 2016
Agnieszka Piwkowska; Dorota Rogacka; Irena Audzeyenka; Malgorzata Kasztan; Stefan Angielski; Maciej Jankowski
Podocytes are dynamic polarized cells that lie on the surface of glomerular capillaries and comprise an essential component of the glomerular filtration barrier. Insulin provoked a sustained, approximately 70%, increase in intracellular calcium concentration in podocytes. RT‐PCR revealed the presence of mRNA encoding sarco/endoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase isoforms 1–3, and plasma membrane Ca2+ pump (PMCA) isoforms 1,3,4; mRNA levels were depressed by the addition of insulin. Inhibitors of PMCA, and the Na+‐Ca2+exchanger, increased podocyte permeability to albumin, induced dimerization of protein kinase G type I alpha (PKGIα), and activation of PKGIα‐dependent signaling. These data suggest the involvement of calcium and PKGIα signaling in insulin‐enhanced filtration barrier permeability in podocytes.