Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Reveals Renal Endothelium Heterogeneity and Metabolic Adaptation to Water Deprivation

Author:

Dumas Sébastien J.,Meta Elda,Borri Mila,Goveia Jermaine,Rohlenova KaterinaORCID,Conchinha Nadine V.,Falkenberg Kim,Teuwen Laure-Anne,de Rooij Laura,Kalucka Joanna,Chen Rongyuan,Khan Shawez,Taverna Federico,Lu Weisi,Parys Magdalena,De Legher Carla,Vinckier Stefan,Karakach Tobias K.ORCID,Schoonjans Luc,Lin Lin,Bolund Lars,Dewerchin Mieke,Eelen Guy,Rabelink Ton J.,Li Xuri,Luo Yonglun,Carmeliet Peter

Abstract

BackgroundRenal endothelial cells from glomerular, cortical, and medullary kidney compartments are exposed to different microenvironmental conditions and support specific kidney processes. However, the heterogeneous phenotypes of these cells remain incompletely inventoried. Osmotic homeostasis is vitally important for regulating cell volume and function, and in mammals, osmotic equilibrium is regulated through the countercurrent system in the renal medulla, where water exchange through endothelium occurs against an osmotic pressure gradient. Dehydration exposes medullary renal endothelial cells to extreme hyperosmolarity, and how these cells adapt to and survive in this hypertonic milieu is unknown.MethodsWe inventoried renal endothelial cell heterogeneity by single-cell RNA sequencing >40,000 mouse renal endothelial cells, and studied transcriptome changes during osmotic adaptation upon water deprivation. We validated our findings by immunostaining and functionally by targeting oxidative phosphorylation in a hyperosmolarity model in vitro and in dehydrated mice in vivo.ResultsWe identified 24 renal endothelial cell phenotypes (of which eight were novel), highlighting extensive heterogeneity of these cells between and within the cortex, glomeruli, and medulla. In response to dehydration and hypertonicity, medullary renal endothelial cells upregulated the expression of genes involved in the hypoxia response, glycolysis, and—surprisingly—oxidative phosphorylation. Endothelial cells increased oxygen consumption when exposed to hyperosmolarity, whereas blocking oxidative phosphorylation compromised endothelial cell viability during hyperosmotic stress and impaired urine concentration during dehydration.ConclusionsThis study provides a high-resolution atlas of the renal endothelium and highlights extensive renal endothelial cell phenotypic heterogeneity, as well as a previously unrecognized role of oxidative phosphorylation in the metabolic adaptation of medullary renal endothelial cells to water deprivation.

Funder

Marie Curie-IF

University of Antwerp

Flemish Cancer Society

Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen

Lundbeck Foundation

DFF Sapere Aude

BGI-Research

Danish Research Council for Independent Research

Sapere Aude

Aarhus University

Sun Yat-Sen University

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guandgong Province Leading Expert Program

Key Program of Guangzhou Scientific Research Plan

VIB TechWatch

Flemish Government

Research Foundation Flanders

Foundation against Cancer

Kom op Tegen Kanker

ERC

Regmed XB

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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