FOXC2 and WT1 regulate transcriptional reprogramming during the podocyte response to injury

Scritto il 08/06/2026
da Sandrine Ettou

JCI Insight. 2026 Jun 8;11(11):e190175. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.190175. eCollection 2026 Jun 8.

ABSTRACT

Transcriptional reprogramming has an important role in kidney glomerular disease. Using in vivo murine models of podocyte injury, we studied the roles of the FOXC2 and WT1 transcription factors (TFs) in podocyte injury. Podocytes are a crucial cell type of glomeruli, the filtration units of each nephron. Podocyte injury is often the incipient event leading to chronic kidney disease. It is well established that the TFs FOXC2 and WT1 are required in podocytes to maintain the glomerular filtration barrier. Their role in the response to injury is less well understood. Here, we tested the hypothesis that FOXC2 and WT1 act together to mediate transcriptional reprogramming in response to podocyte injury. Similarly to that of WT1, genome-wide FOXC2 binding to target genes is dynamic during the course of injury, initially increasing, but late in injury there is a dramatic decrease in FOXC2 expression and in its binding to target genes. Podocyte-specific inactivation of FoxC2 or Wt1 in adult mice limits the transcriptional response to injury. Correlating FOXC2 and WT1 ChIP-seq analyses demonstrated that they co-bind many genes expressed in podocytes. Thus, reprogramming the transcriptome involves dynamic changes in the binding of FOXC2 and WT1 to their target genes during a reparative injury response.

PMID:42258752 | DOI:10.1172/jci.insight.190175