What Makes Cells Grow Larger and How Do They Do It? Renal Hypertrophy Revisited
- 26 July 1999
- journal article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Nephron Experimental Nephrology
- Vol. 7 (4) , 273-283
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000020614
Abstract
Hypertrophy, defined as an increase in cell size without an increase in cell number, occurs in a number of conditions, including compensatory renal growth, diabetes mellitus, protein feeding, chronic metabolic acidosis, and chronic potassium deficiency. In vitro cell culture studies have been used to characterize the mechanisms involved in the development of hypertrophy. Two mechanisms have been identified and characterized. One mechanism involves regulation of processes that are also associated with the initial events of the hyperplastic growth process, and is referred as a cell cycle-dependent mechanism. The other mechanism occurs independently of these particular cell cycle processes, but involves regulation of protein degradation by lysosomal enzymes. This latter mechanism is referred to as a cell cycle-independent mechanism. In vivo studies suggest that both compensatory renal hypertrophy following uninephrectomy and diabetes mellitus-induced hypertrophy involve the cell cycle-dependent mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of the ROMK Potassium Channel in the KidneyNephron Experimental Nephrology, 1999
- Glomerular expression of p27Kip1 in diabetic db/db mouse: Role of hyperglycemiaKidney International, 1998
- Growth-dependent translation of IGF-II mRNA by a rapamycin-sensitive pathwayNature, 1995
- Role of Growth Factors in Regulation of Renal GrowthAnnual Review of Physiology, 1993
- Retinoblastoma protein switches the E2F site from positive to negative elementNature, 1992