https://www.selleckchem.com/products/rimiducid-ap1903.html Autosomal dominant tubulointerstitial disease (ADTKD) is a dominantly inherited progressive nonglomerular disease. Several factors, such as a nonspecific clinical presentation and relative rarity, impede the phenotyping of ADTKD into clinically relevant subtypes and impair the appropriate implementation of genetic testing. The study by Olinger et al. describes the largest multicenter ADTKD cohort, which is likely to become a key resource. The authors also provide a new clinical tool that could guide diagnosis and genetic testing.A recent study supports the concept that reduced kidney function causes higher blood pressure, but it found no evidence of causality in the opposite direction. We describe the method of bidirectional Mendelian randomization that was used to explore the direction of the causal relationship between kidney function and blood pressure, and examine the assumptions required for these analyses to give valid results.Associations among hypertension, podocyte depletion, and chronic kidney disease are well-established, but whether mean arterial pressure (MAP) in the normal range influences podocyte depletion has not been previously examined. In this issue, Naik et al. use non-invasive urinary mRNA analysis to demonstrate that higher podocyte stress and detachment are associated with higher MAP in the normal range. The relationship between blood pressure and podocyte health suddenly got much more interesting.The role of membrane channels in juxtaglomerular cell physiology is only partially understood. Pannexin 1 is a mechanosensitive, nonjunctional channel known for its role in adenosine triphosphate release. The study by DeLalio et al. documents involvement of pannexin 1 in renin secretion by studying mice deficient in pannexin 1 in renin-secreting cells and a prorenin-secreting cell line. Pannexin 1 is believed to suppress renin secretion and thereby modify blood pressure. The commentary addre