J 2025

Decoding diabetic kidney disease: a comprehensive review of interconnected pathways, molecular mediators, and therapeutic insights

EFIONG, Esienanwan Esien; Kathrin MAEDLER; Emmanuel EFFA; Uchechukwu Levi OSUAGWU; Esther PETERS et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Decoding diabetic kidney disease: a comprehensive review of interconnected pathways, molecular mediators, and therapeutic insights

Authors

EFIONG, Esienanwan Esien; Kathrin MAEDLER; Emmanuel EFFA; Uchechukwu Levi OSUAGWU; Esther PETERS; Joshua Onyeka IKEBIURO; Chisom SOREMEKUN; Ugwunna IHEDIWA; Jiefei NIU; Marketa FUCHS; Homa BAZIREH; Akang Leonard BASSEY; Peter Uchenna AMADI; Qiuling DONG; Njogu Mark KIMANI; Rebecca Chinyelu CHUKWUANUKWU; Emmy TUENTER; Sapna SHARMA and Harald GRALLERT

Edition

Diabetology and Metabolic Syndrome, BMC, 2025, 1758-5996

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Přírodovědecká fakulta – Repository – Repository

UT WoS

001502179300001

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-105007251366

Keywords in English

Diabetic nephropathy; Signal pathways; Chronic kidney disease; End-stage kidney disease; Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; Toll-like receptors; Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription; Nuclear factor-kappa B
Changed: 27/6/2025 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

Background Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) is a chronic kidney condition that arises from prolonged hyperglycaemia that can progress to kidney failure, severe morbidity, and mortality if left untreated. It is the major cause of chronic kidney disease among people who have diabetes, accounting for a significant percentage of patients with end-stage kidney disease who require kidney replacement therapy. Main body In DKD, numerous dysbalanced metabolic, haemodynamic, inflammatory signalling pathways, and molecular mediators interconnect, creating a feedback loop that promotes general kidney damage. Hyperglycaemia is the primary trigger for DKD and leads gradually to oxidative stress, inflammation, extracellular matrix deposition and fibrosis, glomerular hypertension, and intrarenal hypoxia. Key interconnected metabolic pathways are the hyperglycaemia-mediated polyol, hexosamine, protein kinase C, and advanced glycation end-products pathway hyperactivity. Concurrently, hyperglycaemia-induced renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system stimulation, alters the kidney intraglomerular haemodynamic leading to inflammation through Toll-like receptors, Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription, and nuclear factor-kappa B, transforming growth factor-beta-mediated excessive extracellular matrix accumulation and fibrosis. The resulting death signals trigger apoptosis and autophagy through Hippo, Notch, and Wnt/beta-catenin pathway activation and microRNA dysregulation. These signals synergistically remodel the kidneys culminating in intrarenal hypoxia, podocyte dysfunction, hyperfiltration, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and loss of kidney function. The resulting renal failure further upregulates these death pathways and mediators, giving rise to a vicious cycle that further worsens DKD. Conclusion This review provides an overview of the primary molecular mediators and signalling pathways leading to DKD; their interconnectivity at the onset and during DKD progression, the central role of transforming growth factor-beta via different pathways, the Hippo pathway kidney-specific response to hyperglycaemia, and how all mediators and transduction signals result in a vicious circle that exacerbates renal failure. The review gives therapeutic sights to these pathways as druggable targets for DKD management. Understanding these molecular events underlying the pathogenesis of DKD can bridge basic research and clinical application, facilitating the development of innovative management strategies.

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