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NDT Advance Access originally published online on September 27, 2005
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation 2005 20(12):2714-2719; doi:10.1093/ndt/gfi124
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© The Author [2005]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org


Original Article

Protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin are expressed in metabolically active epithelial cells of normal and pathologic human kidney

Francesca Diomedi-Camassei1, Lucilla Ravà2, Evelyne Lerut3, Francesco Callea1 and Boudewijn Van Damme3

1 Department of Pathology, 2 Biostatistical Unit, ‘Bambino Gesù’ Children's Hospital-Research Institute, Rome, Italy and 3 Department of Pathology, U.Z.—Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven, Belgium

Correspondence and offprint requests to: Prof. B. Van Damme, Dienst Pathologische Ontleedkunde, U.Z.-K.U.Leuven, MInderbroedersstraat, 12, B3000 Leuven Belgium. Email: bo.vandamme{at}uz.kuleuven.ac.be

Background. In a study initially designed to evaluate the specific protein gene product 9.5 expression in parietal epithelial cells of Bowman's capsule, a marked positivity was also observed in the tubular and collecting duct epithelial cells. Since protein gene product 9.5 is an important enzyme in the ubiquitin system of proteolysis, and plays a regulatory role in cell cycle and proliferation, its presence in specific segments of the nephron was of considerable interest.

Methods. We investigated protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin expression in both normal and pathologic renal samples (more than 100 cases) using an immunohistochemical technique.

Results. We found that protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin were constantly present in Bowman's capsule parietal cells and tubular/collecting duct epithelial cells, with the strongest positivity in metabolically active and proliferative conditions, such as tubular hypertrophy, cellular regeneration and crescent formation. Conversely, the expression of these molecules was attenuated in atrophic tubules. Podocytes were negative.

Conclusion. The diffuse presence of the protein gene product 9.5 and ubiquitin in normal and pathologic metabolically active epithelial cells of the nephron suggests that these proteins (and likely the whole ubiquitin–proteasome complex) play a fundamental role in the mechanism upregulating protein metabolism of the kidney and that its expression is correlated with activated cellular functions, like proliferation.

Keywords: immunohistochemistry; kidney; non-lysosomal proteolysis; parietal epithelial cells of Bowman's capsule; protein gene product 9.5; ubiquitin


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