- Ma, Lijun;
- Ainsworth, Hannah C;
- Snipes, James A;
- Murea, Mariana;
- Choi, Young A;
- Langefeld, Carl D;
- Parks, John S;
- Bharadwaj, Manish S;
- Chou, Jeff W;
- Hemal, Ashok K;
- Petrovic, Snezana;
- Craddock, Ann L;
- Cheng, Dongmei;
- Hawkins, Gregory A;
- Miller, Lance D;
- Hicks, Pamela J;
- Saleem, Moin A;
- Divers, Jasmin;
- Molina, Anthony JA;
- Freedman, Barry I
Introduction
APOL1 G1 and G2 nephropathy-risk variants cause mitochondrial dysfunction and contribute to kidney disease. Analyses were performed to determine the genetic regulation of APOL1 and elucidate potential mechanisms in APOL1-nephropathy.Methods
A global gene expression analysis was performed in human primary renal tubule cell lines derived from 50 African American individuals. Follow-up gene knock out, cell-based rescue, and microscopy experiments were performed.Results
APOL1 genotypes did not alter APOL1 expression levels in the global gene expression analysis. Expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) analysis in polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (poly IC)-stimulated renal tubule cells revealed that single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs513349 adjacent to BAK1 was a trans eQTL for APOL1 and a cis eQTL for BAK1; APOL1 and BAK1 were co-expressed in cells. BAK1 knockout in a human podocyte cell line resulted in diminished APOL1 protein, supporting a pivotal effect for BAK1 on APOL1 expression. Because BAK1 is involved in mitochondrial dynamics, mitochondrial morphology was examined in primary renal tubule cells and HEK293 Tet-on cells of various APOL1 genotypes. Mitochondria in APOL1 wild-type (G0G0) tubule cells maintained elongated morphology when stimulated by low-dose poly IC, whereas those with G1G1, G2G2, and G1G2 genotypes appeared to fragment. HEK293 Tet-on cells overexpressing APOL1 G0, G1, and G2 were created; G0 cells appeared to promote mitochondrial fusion, whereas G1 and G2 induced mitochondrial fission. The mitochondrial dynamic regulator Mdivi-1 significantly preserved cell viability and mitochondrial cristae structure and reversed mitochondrial fission induced by overexpression of G1 and G2.Conclusion
Results suggest the mitochondrial fusion/fission pathway may be a therapeutic target in APOL1-nephropathy.