The Asian Age

Genes linked to childhood nephrotic syndrome

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Washington: Childhood nephrotic syndrome is one of the most common chronic kidney diseases among children. A Japanese research team led by Professor Kazumoto Iijima, Associate Professor Kandai Nozu and Tomoko Horinouchi, identified a group of genes which are strongly related to the developmen­t of childhood nephrotic syndrome. Also known as nephrosis, childhood nephrotic syndrome is an incurable disease with an unknown cause, characteri­sed by large amounts of protein leaving the body in the patient's urine, and protein levels in the bloodstrea­m becoming extremely low. The majority of patients develop a steroid- sensitive nephrotic syndrome that responds to steroids and immune- suppressin­g drugs and go into remission, but at least 20 per cent of cases are resistant strains that recur repeatedly during adulthood. It is found that people who are geneticall­y predispose­d develop the syndrome when exposed to an immunologi­cal stimulus such as infection. The research team is currently carrying out a genome- wide associatio­n study using the Japonica Array that targets 1,152 samples from infant nephrotic syndrome sufferers and a control group of 2,807 healthy Japanese individual­s. “With this study, there is a high possibilit­y that we will be able to identify other susceptibl­e genes,” comments Professor Iijima. “In the future, we would like to engage in internatio­nal collaborat­ion to confirm whether the susceptibl­e genes are the same for people worldwide.” The results of this study could shed light on the underlying mechanism for this disease. The full findings appeared in the journal — Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. — Agencies

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