Tubular kidney injury molecule‐1 (KIM‐1) in human renal disease

MM van Timmeren(University Medical Center Groningen), MC van den Heuvel(University Medical Center Groningen), V Bailly(Biogen (United States)), SJL Bakker(University Medical Center Groningen), Harry van Goor(University Medical Center Groningen), Coen A. Stegeman(University Medical Center Groningen)
The Journal of Pathology
April 30, 2007
Cited by 477Open Access
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Abstract

KIM-1, a transmembrane tubular protein with unknown function, is undetectable in normal kidneys, but is markedly induced in experimental renal injury. The KIM-1 ectodomain is cleaved, detectable in urine, and reflects renal damage. KIM-1 expression in human renal biopsies and its correlation with urinary KIM-1 (uKIM-1) is unknown. In biopsies from various renal diseases (n = 102) and controls (n = 7), the fraction of KIM-1 positive tubules and different renal damage parameters were scored. Double labelling was performed for KIM-1 with macrophages (MØ), alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), proximal (aquaporin-1) and distal (E-cadherin) tubular markers and a dedifferentiation marker (vimentin). uKIM-1 at the time of biopsy (n = 53) was measured by ELISA. Renal KIM-1 was significantly increased in all diseases versus controls (p < 0.05), except minimal change. KIM-1 was primarily expressed at the luminal side of dedifferentiated proximal tubules, in areas with fibrosis (alpha-SMA) and inflammation (MØ). Independent of the disease, renal KIM-1 correlated positively with renal damage, negatively with renal function, but not with proteinuria. uKIM-1 was increased in renal patients versus controls (p < 0.001), including minimal change, and correlated positively with tissue KIM-1 and MØ, negatively with renal function, but not with proteinuria. In conclusion, KIM-1 is upregulated in renal disease and is associated with renal fibrosis and inflammation. uKIM-1 is also associated with inflammation and renal function, and reflects tissue KIM-1, indicating that it can be used as a non-invasive biomarker in renal disease.


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