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D-Serine as a sensor and effector of the kidney.

Tomonori KimuraShinsuke SakaiYoshitaka Isaka
Published in: Clinical and experimental nephrology (2023)
D-Serine, a rare enantiomer of serine, is a biomarker of kidney disease and function. The level of D-serine in the human body is precisely regulated through the urinary clearance of the kidney, and its clearance serves as a new measure of glomerular filtration rate with a lower bias than creatinine clearance. D-Serine also has a direct effect on the kidneys and mediates the cellular proliferation of tubular cells via mTOR signaling and induces kidney remodeling as a compensatory reaction to the loss of kidney mass. In living kidney donors, the removal of the kidney results in an increase in blood D-serine level, which in turn accelerates kidney remodeling and augments kidney clearance, thus reducing blood levels of D-serine. This feedback system strictly controls D-serine levels in the body. The function of D-serine as a biomarker and modulator of kidney function will be the basis of precision medicine for kidney diseases.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • endothelial cells
  • immune response
  • cell proliferation
  • regulatory t cells
  • dendritic cells
  • sensitive detection
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • single molecule