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BOSTON (USA) ? A
new study led by
investigators at
Beth Israel
Deaconess
Medical Center (BIDMC)
has shown that a
protein used to
heal fractured
bones is
effective in
repairing and
reversing
chronic renal
disease, a
leading cause of
morbidity and
mortality
throughout the
U.S.
These findings,
which are
reported in the
July 2003 issue
of Nature
Medicine, could
help lead to the
development of a
therapeutic
alternative for
the nearly
300,000 kidney
disease patients
who are
currently
undergoing
dialysis.
'Dialysis is not
really a
treatment, it's
just a means of
survival until
an opportunity
for a transplant
opens up,' notes
the study's
senior author
Raghu Kalluri,
Ph.D., director
of the Center
for Matrix
Biology at BIDMC
and Associate
Professor of
Medicine at
Harvard Medical
School.
'This is a very
tedious way of
living life,' he
adds, explaining
that the process
of mechanically
filtering blood
through a
machine to
remove waste
products must be
performed
several times a
week for a
period of three
to four hours
per visit,
posing risks of
infection and
other side
effects.
Furthermore, the
procedure is
extremely
costly.
The kidneys
function as a
filtration
system, keeping
the body's blood
supply healthy
by removing
excess fluids
and wastes, as
well as by
producing
hormones. When
kidneys 'fail'
as can result
from
complications
associated with
diabetes, lupus
or several other
diseases
harmful wastes
accumulate in
the bloodstream,
excess fluids
build up in the
body, and red
blood cell
production is
impeded.
Once chronic
kidney disease
develops, it
cannot be
reversed or
repaired; when
the organs cease
to function,
patients have no
alternative but
to undergo
dialysis while
awaiting a
kidney
transplant.
This new study
looked at the
role of a
molecule called
bone morphogenic
protein (BMP)- 7
which, in its
recombinant
form, has been
approved by the
U.S. Food and
Drug
Administration
for the
treatment of
bone fractures.
Earlier studies
had revealed
that BMP-7 is
highly expressed
in the kidneys
of healthy
individuals. 'We
wanted to learn
if this protein
was somehow
offering
protection
against kidney
injury,'
explains Kalluri.
The
investigators
used mouse
models of
chronic renal
injury,
characterized by
the presence of
scar tissue
known as renal
fibrosis; once
kidney disease
was
well-established
in the animals,
they
administered
human
recombinant
BMP-7.
'We found that
in the kidneys,
BMP-7 reverses a
process known as
epithelial-to-mesenchymal
transition,
which generates
scar-causing
cells known as
fibroblasts,'
says Kalluri,
explaining that
BMP-7 first
reduces the
number of the
fibroblast
cells, and then
replaces the
damaged areas of
the kidney
tubules with
healthy
epithelial
cells.
'In effect,' he
adds, 'BMP-7 is
decreasing the
bad cells [in
this context,
fibroblasts] and
converting them
into good cells
[in this
context,
epithelial
cells].'
Although
therapies exist
to slow
progression of
kidney disease,
once it has
developed it
becomes
intractable,
eventually
leaving patients
no alternative
but to undergo
dialysis.
'The possibility
of creating a
cost-effective
drug that would
actually reverse
renal injury
could
significantly
reduce the need
for dialysis and
significantly
improve the
quality of life
for these
patients,' says
Kalluri.
Study co-authors
include BIDMC
investigators
Michael Zeisberg,
M.D., Jun-ichi
Hanai, M.D.,
Hikaru Sugimoto,
M.D., Ph.D.,
Tadanori Mammoto,
Ph.D., David
Charytan, M.D.,
and Frank Strutz,
M.D.
This study was
funded by grants
from the
National
Institutes of
Health, Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft,
and support from
the Center for
Matrix Biology,
BIDMC. Ortho
Biotech
Products, L.P.,
is the exclusive
licensee of
BMP-7.
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