Publication | Closed Access
An atlas of healthy and injured cell states and niches in the human kidney
115
Citations
76
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
Renal PathologyImmunologyRenal InflammationTissue NeighborhoodsCytoskeletonSpatial OmicsInjured Cell StatesCellular PhysiologyKidney InjuryGlomerulonephritisRenal FunctionSingle Cell SequencingCell DevelopmentAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseKidney Tubule RemodelingCell SignalingMolecular SignalingHuman KidneyOmicsPathway AnalysisRenal PathophysiologyEpigenetic RegulationSingle-cell AnalysisCell BiologyHuman CellUrologyImmune Cell DevelopmentSystems BiologyMedicineNephrologyKidney ResearchExtracellular Matrix
Abstract Understanding kidney disease relies upon defining the complexity of cell types and states, their associated molecular profiles, and interactions within tissue neighborhoods. We have applied multiple single-cell or -nucleus assays (>400,000 nuclei/cells) and spatial imaging technologies to a broad spectrum of healthy reference (n = 42) and disease (n = 42) kidneys. This has provided a high resolution cellular atlas of 100 cell types that include rare and novel cell populations. The multi-omic approach provides detailed transcriptomic profiles, epigenomic regulatory factors, and spatial localizations for major cell types spanning the entire kidney. We further identify and define cellular states altered in kidney injury, encompassing cycling, adaptive or maladaptive repair, transitioning and degenerative states affecting several segments. Molecular signatures of these states permitted their localization within injury neighborhoods using spatial transcriptomics, and large-scale 3D imaging analysis of ∼1.2 million neighborhoods provided linkages to active immune responses. These analyses further defined biological pathways relevant to injury niches, including signatures underlying the transition from reference to predicted maladaptive states that were associated with a decline in kidney function during chronic kidney disease. This human kidney cell atlas, including injury cell states and neighborhoods, will be a valuable resource for future studies.
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