Frontiers in Physiology (Jul 2021)

Whole-Mount Kidney Clearing and Visualization Reveal Renal Sympathetic Hyperinnervation in Heart Failure Mice

  • Chao Wu,
  • Fang Yan,
  • Min Li,
  • Yimin Tu,
  • Yimin Tu,
  • Ziyu Guo,
  • Yufei Chen,
  • Yufei Chen,
  • Yaxin Wu,
  • Qing Li,
  • Changan Yu,
  • Yi Fu,
  • Yi Fu,
  • Meihui Wu,
  • Wei Kong,
  • Wei Kong,
  • Yanxiang Gao,
  • Xiaowei Li,
  • Jingang Zheng,
  • Jingang Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.696286
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Developing a three-dimensional (3D) visualization of the kidney at the whole-mount scale is challenging. In the present study, we optimized mouse whole-mount kidney clearing, which improved the transparency ratio to over 90% based on organ-specific perfusion (OSP)-clear, unobstructed brain imaging cocktails and computational analysis (CUBIC). The optimized OSP-CUBIC-compatible 3D immunostaining and imaging simultaneously visualized the high-resolution 3D structure of the whole-mount renal microvascular, glomerulus, and accompanying wrapped traveling sympathetic nerves in mice. A mouse model of pressure overload-induced heart failure (HF) was then established by minimally invasive transverse aortic constriction (MTAC). Further 3D quantification revealed renal sympathetic hyperinnervation (6.80 ± 1.04% vs. 3.73 ± 0.60%, P < 0.05) in mice with HF. In conclusion, this newly developed whole-organ tissue clearing and imaging system provides comprehensive information at the whole-mount scale and has great potential for kidney research. Our data suggest that renal sympathetic hyperinnervation is involved in HF associated with renal dysfunction.

Keywords