Transcriptomic, epigenomic, and spatial metabolomic cell profiling redefines regional human kidney anatomy

Haikuo Li(Washington University in St. Louis), Dian Li(Washington University in St. Louis), Nicolas Ledru(Washington University in St. Louis), Qiao Xuanyuan(Washington University in St. Louis), Hao Wu(Washington University in St. Louis), Amish Asthana(Forest Institute), Lori N. Byers(Forest Institute), Stefan G. Tullius(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Giuseppe Orlando(Forest Institute), Sushrut S. Waikar(Boston University), Benjamin D. Humphreys(Washington University in St. Louis)
Cell Metabolism
March 20, 2024
Cited by 78Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

A large-scale multimodal atlas that includes major kidney regions is lacking. Here, we employed simultaneous high-throughput single-cell ATAC/RNA sequencing (SHARE-seq) and spatially resolved metabolomics to profile 54 human samples from distinct kidney anatomical regions. We generated transcriptomes of 446,267 cells and chromatin accessibility profiles of 401,875 cells and developed a package to analyze 408,218 spatially resolved metabolomes. We find that the same cell type, including thin limb, thick ascending limb loop of Henle and principal cells, display distinct transcriptomic, chromatin accessibility, and metabolomic signatures, depending on anatomic location. Surveying metabolism-associated gene profiles revealed non-overlapping metabolic signatures between nephron segments and dysregulated lipid metabolism in diseased proximal tubule (PT) cells. Integrating multimodal omics with clinical data identified PLEKHA1 as a disease marker, and its in vitro knockdown increased gene expression in PT differentiation, suggesting possible pathogenic roles. This study highlights previously underrepresented cellular heterogeneity underlying the human kidney anatomy.


Related Papers