Back to Search Start Over

An atlas of healthy and injured cell states and niches in the human kidney.

Authors :
Lake, Blue
Lake, Blue
Menon, Rajasree
Winfree, Seth
Hu, Qiwen
Ferreira, Ricardo
Kalhor, Kian
Barwinska, Daria
Otto, Edgar
Ferkowicz, Michael
Diep, Dinh
Plongthongkum, Nongluk
Knoten, Amanda
Urata, Sarah
Mariani, Laura
Naik, Abhijit
Eddy, Sean
Zhang, Bo
Wu, Yan
Salamon, Diane
Williams, James
Wang, Xin
Balderrama, Karol
Hoover, Paul
Murray, Evan
Marshall, Jamie
Noel, Teia
Vijayan, Anitha
Hartman, Austin
Chen, Fei
Waikar, Sushrut
Rosas, Sylvia
Wilson, Francis
Palevsky, Paul
Kiryluk, Krzysztof
Sedor, John
Toto, Robert
Parikh, Chirag
Kim, Eric
Satija, Rahul
Greka, Anna
Macosko, Evan
Kharchenko, Peter
Gaut, Joseph
Hodgin, Jeffrey
Eadon, Michael
Dagher, Pierre
El-Achkar, Tarek
Kretzler, Matthias
Jain, Sanjay
Zhang, Kun
Lake, Blue
Lake, Blue
Menon, Rajasree
Winfree, Seth
Hu, Qiwen
Ferreira, Ricardo
Kalhor, Kian
Barwinska, Daria
Otto, Edgar
Ferkowicz, Michael
Diep, Dinh
Plongthongkum, Nongluk
Knoten, Amanda
Urata, Sarah
Mariani, Laura
Naik, Abhijit
Eddy, Sean
Zhang, Bo
Wu, Yan
Salamon, Diane
Williams, James
Wang, Xin
Balderrama, Karol
Hoover, Paul
Murray, Evan
Marshall, Jamie
Noel, Teia
Vijayan, Anitha
Hartman, Austin
Chen, Fei
Waikar, Sushrut
Rosas, Sylvia
Wilson, Francis
Palevsky, Paul
Kiryluk, Krzysztof
Sedor, John
Toto, Robert
Parikh, Chirag
Kim, Eric
Satija, Rahul
Greka, Anna
Macosko, Evan
Kharchenko, Peter
Gaut, Joseph
Hodgin, Jeffrey
Eadon, Michael
Dagher, Pierre
El-Achkar, Tarek
Kretzler, Matthias
Jain, Sanjay
Zhang, Kun
Source :
Nature; vol 619, iss 7970
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Understanding kidney disease relies on defining the complexity of cell types and states, their associated molecular profiles and interactions within tissue neighbourhoods1. Here we applied multiple single-cell and single-nucleus assays (>400,000 nuclei or cells) and spatial imaging technologies to a broad spectrum of healthy reference kidneys (45 donors) and diseased kidneys (48 patients). This has provided a high-resolution cellular atlas of 51 main cell types, which include rare and previously undescribed cell populations. The multi-omic approach provides detailed transcriptomic profiles, regulatory factors and spatial localizations spanning the entire kidney. We also define 28 cellular states across nephron segments and interstitium that were altered in kidney injury, encompassing cycling, adaptive (successful or maladaptive repair), transitioning and degenerative states. Molecular signatures permitted the localization of these states within injury neighbourhoods using spatial transcriptomics, while large-scale 3D imaging analysis (around 1.2 million neighbourhoods) provided corresponding linkages to active immune responses. These analyses defined biological pathways that are relevant to injury time-course and niches, including signatures underlying epithelial repair that predicted maladaptive states associated with a decline in kidney function. This integrated multimodal spatial cell atlas of healthy and diseased human kidneys represents a comprehensive benchmark of cellular states, neighbourhoods, outcome-associated signatures and publicly available interactive visualizations.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature; vol 619, iss 7970
Notes :
application/pdf, Nature vol 619, iss 7970
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401036787
Document Type :
Electronic Resource