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NDT Advance Access published online on April 6, 2005

Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, doi:10.1093/ndt/gfh798
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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@oupjournals.org
Received November 29, 2004
Accepted January 28, 2005


Hypothesis

An unusual association of contralateral congenital small kidney, reduced renal function and hyperparathyroidism in sponge kidney patients: on the track of the molecular basis

Giovanni Gambaro 1*, Antonia Fabris 2, Lorenzo Citron 3, Enrica Tosetto 4, Franca Anglani 4, Francesco Bellan 3, Marilena Conte 2, Luciana Bonfante 3, Antonio Lupo 2, and Angela D'Angelo 3

1 Division of Nephrology, Department of Biomedical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Verona, Italy; Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Padova, Italy
2 Division of Nephrology, Department of Biomedical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Verona, Italy
3 Division of Nephrology, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Padova, Italy
4 Division of Nephrology, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Padova, Italy; Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University Hospital of Padova, Italy

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Giovanni Gambaro, E-mail: giovanni.gambaro{at}univr.it



  Abstract

Of unknown pathogenesis, sponge kidney (SK) is variably associated with nephrocalcinosis, stones, nephronic tubule dysfunctions and precalyceal duct cysts. Amongst 72 unrelated renal SK patients with renal stone disease, we detected one with unilateral bifid renal pelvis and six with unilateral small kidneys (longitudinal diameter difference >15%). Secondary causes of small kidney were excluded. Of the seven cases, four had reduced renal function (67 vs 7% in the entire cohort), and three developed hyperparathyroidism during follow-up (43 vs 4%). The pathogenesis of SK ought to explain why anatomical structures of different embryological origin are involved (the precalyceal and collecting ducts and the nephron) and why there is frequent association with hyperparathyroidism. In embryogenesis, the metanephric blastema synthesizes the chemotactic glial-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) to prompt the ureteric bud to branch off from Wolff's mesonephric duct, and to approach and invade the blastema. The bud's tip expresses the GDNF receptor (RET). RET-GDNF binding is crucial not only for the correct formation of ureters and collecting ducts (both of Wolffian origin), but also for nephrogenesis. We advance the hypothesis that SK results from a disruption in the ureteric bud-metanephric blastema interface, possibly due to one or more mutations or polymorphisms of RET or GDNF genes. This would explain: the concurrent alterations in precalyceal ducts and the functional defects in the nephron, the occasional association with size and the functional asymmetry between the two kidneys, some degree of renal dysplasia causing the reduction in the glomerular filtration rate and (given the role of RET in parathyroid cell proliferation) the association with hyperparathyroidism.

Keywords: hyperparathyroidism; MEN-2A; renal hypoplasia; RET; sponge kidney.
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