Title of article :
Prolonging Nephrogenesis in Preterm Infants A New Approach for Prevention of Kidney Disease in Adulthood?
Author/Authors :
Fanos, Vassilios University of Cagliari - Department of Surgery , Castagnola, Massimo Catholic University - Faculty of Medicine - , Faa, Gavino University of Cagliari - Department of Surgery
Abstract :
Chronic kidney disease represents a dramatic worldwide resourceconsuming
problem. This problem is of increasing importance
even in preterm infants, since nephrogenesis may go on only for
a few weeks (4 to 6 weeks) after birth. Recent literature focusing
on traditional regenerative medicine does not take into account the
presence of a high number of active endogenous stem cells in the
preterm kidney, which represents a unique opportunity for starting
regenerative medicine in the perinatal period. Pluripotent cells of the
blue strip have the capacity to generate new nephrons, improving
kidney function in neonates and potentially protecting them from
developing chronic kidney disease and end-stage renal disease in
adulthood. There is a marked interindividual neonatal variability
of nephron numbers. Moreover, the renal stem/progenitor cells
appear as densely-packed small cells with scant cytoplasm, giving
rise to a blue-appearing strip in hematoxylin-eosin–stained kidney
sections (“the blue strip”). There are questions concerning renal
regenerative medicine: among preliminary data, the simultaneous
expression of Wilms tumor 1 and thymosin β4 in stem/progenitor
cells of the neonatal kidney may bring new prospects for renal
regeneration applied to renal stem cells that reside in the kidney
itself. A potential approach could be to prolong the 6 weeks of
postnatal renal growth of nephrons or to accelerate the growth of
nephrons during the 6 weeks or both. Considering what we know
today about perinatal programming, this could be an important
step for the future to reduce the incidence and global health impact
of chronic kidney disease.
Keywords :
regenerative medicine , chronic kidney disease , prevention , premature infants , nephrogenesis
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics