New technology that looks at tens of thousands of GIST cells one by one, suggests new treatment possibilities for chronic kidney disease

International joint research with Gist-University of Pennsylvania-Barcelona University of Science and Technology

[베리타스 알파=유재명 기자] The team of Professor Ji-Hwan Park of the Gist Department of Life Sciences discovers key regulators that play an important role in the process of developing normal kidney development into chronic kidney disease through international joint research with the University of Pennsylvania, Spain, and the Barcelona University of Science and Technology. Presented.

The research team analyzed the kidney, one of the organs composed of the most complex cell types in our body through the latest single-cell analysis technology, at the level of individual cells. We discovered estrogen-related receptors that play a central role in

Single cell analysis technology: It is a technology that can analyze the expression of all genes expressed in tens of thousands of individual cells in one experiment, and is recently evaluated as one of the most important next-generation technologies in the field of biology and medical life.
Chronic kidney disease is a disease commonly associated with diabetic hypertension, and the number of patients worldwide is increasing rapidly to about 800 million. When it develops into end-stage kidney disease, there is no cure other than dialysis and kidney transplantation, causing great pain to patients and their families, and the cost of socioeconomic disease is high. Once chronic kidney disease begins to progress, there is still no cure to stop or recover, so the development of a new therapy is urgent.

Through single-cell analysis of human chronic kidney disease-induced animal model kidney organ analogues, the research team found that in chronic kidney disease, there are a number of incorrectly differentiated proximal tubular epithelial cells in the kidney, and that there is a problem in their lipid metabolism. Revealed. It was confirmed that the key regulator of proximal tubular epithelial cell differentiation and lipid metabolism is an estrogen-related receptor, and it can control chronic kidney disease by inhibiting or overexpressing this gene.

Professor Ji-Hwan Park said, “The research has the greatest significance in that it has identified the core cell types and regulators of chronic kidney disease by incorporating the latest technologies such as single-cell analysis technology and kidney organ analogues.” “We have confirmed the possibility of developing a drug that is only specifically effective.”

This research, which Professor Ji-Hwan Park participated in, was carried out with support from the Korea Research Foundation’s New Researcher Support Project and Basic Research Lab.

Photo = provided by GIST
Photo = provided by GIST

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