Aims/hypothesis
The slit diaphragm is an adhesion and signalling protein complex linking the interdigitating podocyte foot processes in the
kidney glomerulus, and mutations in slit diaphragm-associated genes result in severe proteinuria. Here we report a genetic
association analysis of four slit diaphragm genes, LRRC7, KIRREL, NPHS2 and ACTN4, in a Finnish diabetic nephropathy cohort.
Materials and methods
A total of 40 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were genotyped in 1103 patients with type 1 diabetes. The patients were
classified according to their renal status, and the genotype data were analysed in a cross-sectional case–control setting.
To confirm positive associations, four SNPs were genotyped in 1,025 additional patients with type 1 diabetes.
Results
No associations with diabetic nephropathy were observed for any of the analysed SNPs. The SNPs were not associated with the
time from the onset of diabetes to the diagnosis of nephropathy or with glomerular filtration rate or AER as quantitative
variables. In a sex-specific sub-analysis, the variants rs979972 and rs749701 in the first intron of ACTN4 were nominally associated with diabetic nephropathy in females, with odds ratios of 1.81 (95% CI 1.18–2.79, p = 0.007) and 1.93 (95% CI 1.26–2.96, p = 0.003) respectively.
Conclusions/interpretation
Our study has not found any evidence that common variants in LRRC7, KIRREL, NPHS2 and ACTN4 contribute to susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy in Finnish patients with type 1 diabetes.
Keywords Diabetic nephropathy - Proteinuria - Podocytes - Molecular genetics - Glomerular filtration barrier