Perspectives in Basic Science

Kidney International (2003) 63, 809–825; doi:10.1046/j.1523-1755.2003.00840.x

Pathophysiology of proteinuria

Giuseppe D'Amico and Claudio Bazzi

Division of Nephrology, San Carlo Borromeo Hospital, Milano, Italy

Correspondence: Giuseppe D'Amico, M.D., F.R.C.P., Division of Nephrology, San Carlo Borromeo Hospital, Via Pio II, 3 – 20153 Milano, Italy E-mail: giuseppe.damico@oscb.sined.net

Received 4 July 2002; Revised 16 October 2002; Accepted 18 October 2002.

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Abstract

Pathophysiology of proteinuria. Proteinuria is consequence of two mechanisms: the abnormal transglomerular passage of proteins due to increased permeability of glomerular capillary wall and their subsequent impaired reabsorption by the epithelial cells of the proximal tubuli. In the various glomerular diseases, the severity of disruption of the structural integrity of the glomerular capillary wall correlates with the area of the glomerular barrier being permeated by "large" pores, permitting the passage in the tubular lumen of high-molecular-weight (HMW) proteins, to which the barrier is normally impermeable. The increased load of such proteins in the tubular lumen leads to the saturation of the reabsorptive mechanism by the tubular cells, and, in the most severe or chronic conditions, to their toxic damage, that favors the increased urinary excretion of all proteins, including low-molecular-weight (LMW) proteins, which are completely reabsorbed in physiologic conditions.

Recent clinical studies showed that in patients with glomerular diseases the urinary excretion of some HMW proteins [immunoglobulins G and M (IgG and IgM)] and of some LMW proteins, alpha1-microglobulin, beta2-microglobulin, correlates with the severity of the histologic lesions, and may predict, better than the quantity of proteinuria, the natural course, the outcome, and the response to treatment. It is suggested that some patients have already, at the time of clinical presentation, a structural damage of the glomerular capillary wall (injury of podocytes) and of the tubulointerstitium, the severity and scarce reversibility of which are reliably indicated by an elevated urinary excretion of HMW and LMW proteins.

Keywords:

proteinuria, glomerular wall permselectivity, urinary IgG, urinary alpha1-microglobulin, podocytes

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