Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) secondary to ischemia continues to be a major clinical problem due to its high morbidity and mortality, and limited treatment options. Animal models are critical to both the study of the pathophysiology of AKI and the development of new interventions. Although histological changes at the glomerulotubular junction have been described in AKI, we examined here whether the extent of glomerular tubularization correlates with the degree of renal insufficiency in this condition. Methods: Groups of mice with ischemia/reperfusion AKI were utilized in which the severity of renal insufficiency was defined. The resulting level of glomerular tubularization was analyzed, and the involved cell type was identified by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. Results: The extent of glomerular tubularization increased significantly with the degree of renal insufficiency. Low level glomerular tubularization was present in normal mouse kidneys, while it was more common and increasingly circumferential in mice with more severe loss of kidney function. The parietal monolayer of cuboidal cells in glomeruli was contiguous with proximal tubular cells, showing a well-developed luminal brush border and positive staining for proliferating cell nuclear antigen and Lotus tetragonolobus, a proximal tubular cell-specific lectin. Conclusion: Increased levels of glomerular tubularization represent a poorly understood response to ischemic AKI in mice. As such, this glomerular ‘tubularization score’ may be useful to complement standard injury scores in experimental and, if detected, in clinical AKI.

1.
Liangos O, Wald R, O’Bell JW, Price L, Pereira BJ, Jaber BL: Epidemiology and outcomes of acute renal failure in hospitalized patients: a national survey. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 2006;1:43–51.
2.
Lee SJ, Howie AJ: Changes at the glomerulo-tubular junction in renal transplants. J Pathol 1988;156:311–318.
[PubMed]
3.
Solez K, Morel-Maroger L, Sraer JD: The morphology of ‘acute tubular necrosis’ in man: analysis of 57 renal biopsies and a comparison with the glycerol model. Medicine (Baltimore) 1979;58:362–376.
[PubMed]
4.
Waugh D, Beschel H: Infra-glomerular epithelial reflux in the evolution of serotonin nephropathy in rats. Am J Pathol 1961;39:547–560.
[PubMed]
5.
Togel F, Isaac J, Westenfelder C: Hematopoietic stem cell mobilization-associated granulocytosis severely worsens acute renal failure. J Am Soc Nephrol 2004;15:1261–1267.
[PubMed]
6.
Chatterjee PK, Brown PA, Cuzzocrea S, Zacharowski K, Stewart KN, Mota-Filipe H, McDonald MC, Thiemermann C: Calpain inhibitor-1 reduces renal ischemia/reperfusion injury in the rat. Kidney Int 2001;59:2073–2083.
[PubMed]
7.
Lee SJ, Sparke J, Howie AJ: The mammalian glomerulotubular junction studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. J Anat 1993;182:177–185.
[PubMed]
8.
Garcia-Caceres U: Histologic aspects of subacute glomerulonephritis; with special reference to proliferative alterations in the epithelium of renal tubules. Am J Pathol 1959;35:755–767.
[PubMed]
9.
Kanel GC, Peters RL: Glomerular tubular reflux – a morphologic renal lesion associated with the hepatorenal syndrome. Hepatology 1984;4:242–246.
[PubMed]
10.
Barberini F, Familiari G, Vittori I, Carpino F, Melis M: Morphological and statistical investigation of the occurrence of ‘tubule-like cells’ in the renal corpuscle of the mouse kidney induced by sex hormones. Ren Physiol 1984;7:227–236.
[PubMed]
11.
Castelletto L, Goya RG: Sex-related incidence of tubular metaplasia in Bowman’s capsule of aging rats. Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1990;59:79–82.
[PubMed]
12.
Andrews PM: The presence of proximal tubule like cells in the kidney parietal epithelium in response to unilateral nephrectomy. Anat Rec 1981;200:61–65.
[PubMed]
13.
Valdes AJ, Zhang JM: Intraglomerular tubular epithelial cells. A marker of glomerular hematuria. Arch Pathol Lab Med 1987;111:189–191.
[PubMed]
14.
Waugh D, Schlieter W, James AW: Infraglomerular epithelial reflux. An early lesion of acute renal failure. Arch Pathol 1964;77:93–96.
[PubMed]
You do not currently have access to this content.