Kidney International Reports (Feb 2022)

Urine Single-Cell RNA Sequencing in Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis Reveals Inflammatory Signatures

  • Khun Zaw Latt,
  • Jurgen Heymann,
  • Joseph H. Jessee,
  • Avi Z. Rosenberg,
  • Celine C. Berthier,
  • Arnon Arazi,
  • Sean Eddy,
  • Teruhiko Yoshida,
  • Yongmei Zhao,
  • Vicky Chen,
  • George W. Nelson,
  • Margaret Cam,
  • Parimal Kumar,
  • Monika Mehta,
  • Michael C. Kelly,
  • Matthias Kretzler,
  • Patricio E. Ray,
  • Marva Moxey-Mims,
  • Gregory H. Gorman,
  • Brent L. Lechner,
  • Renu Regunathan-Shenk,
  • Dominic S. Raj,
  • Katalin Susztak,
  • Cheryl A. Winkler,
  • Jeffrey B. Kopp

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 289 – 304

Abstract

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Introduction: Individuals with focal segmental glomerular sclerosis (FSGS) typically undergo kidney biopsy only once, which limits the ability to characterize kidney cell gene expression over time. Methods: We used single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to explore disease-related molecular signatures in urine cells from subjects with FSGS. We collected 17 urine samples from 12 FSGS subjects and captured these as 23 urine cell samples. The inflammatory signatures from renal epithelial and immune cells were evaluated in bulk gene expression data sets of FSGS and minimal change disease (MCD) (The Nephrotic Syndrome Study Network [NEPTUNE] study) and an immune single-cell data set from lupus nephritis (Accelerating Medicines Partnership). Results: We identified immune cells, predominantly monocytes, and renal epithelial cells in the urine. Further analysis revealed 2 monocyte subtypes consistent with M1 and M2 monocytes. Shed podocytes in the urine had high expression of marker genes for epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). We selected the 16 most highly expressed genes from urine immune cells and 10 most highly expressed EMT genes from urine podocytes as immune signatures and EMT signatures, respectively. Using kidney biopsy transcriptomic data from NEPTUNE, we found that urine cell immune signature and EMT signature genes were more highly expressed in FSGS biopsies compared with MCD biopsies. Conclusion: The identification of monocyte subsets and podocyte expression signatures in the urine samples of subjects with FSGS suggests that urine cell profiling might serve as a diagnostic and prognostic tool in nephrotic syndrome. Furthermore, this approach may aid in the development of novel biomarkers and identifying personalized therapies targeting particular molecular pathways in immune cells and podocytes.

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