Urinary Single-Cell Profiling Captures the Cellular Diversity of the Kidney

Author:

Abedini AminORCID,Zhu Yuan O.,Chatterjee Shatakshee,Halasz GaborORCID,Devalaraja-Narashimha Kishor,Shrestha Rojesh,S. Balzer MichaelORCID,Park JihwanORCID,Zhou Tong,Ma ZiyuanORCID,Sullivan Katie Marie,Hu Hailong,Sheng XinORCID,Liu HongboORCID,Wei Yi,Boustany-Kari Carine M.,Patel Uptal,Almaani Salem,Palmer Matthew,Townsend Raymond,Blady Shira,Hogan Jonathan,Morton Lori,Susztak KatalinORCID,

Abstract

BackgroundMicroscopic analysis of urine sediment is probably the most commonly used diagnostic procedure in nephrology. The urinary cells, however, have not yet undergone careful unbiased characterization.MethodsSingle-cell transcriptomic analysis was performed on 17 urine samples obtained from five subjects at two different occasions, using both spot and 24-hour urine collection. A pooled urine sample from multiple healthy individuals served as a reference control. In total 23,082 cells were analyzed. Urinary cells were compared with human kidney and human bladder datasets to understand similarities and differences among the observed cell types.ResultsAlmost all kidney cell types can be identified in urine, such as podocyte, proximal tubule, loop of Henle, and collecting duct, in addition to macrophages, lymphocytes, and bladder cells. The urinary cell–type composition was subject specific and reasonably stable using different collection methods and over time. Urinary cells clustered with kidney and bladder cells, such as urinary podocytes with kidney podocytes, and principal cells of the kidney and urine, indicating their similarities in gene expression.ConclusionsA reference dataset for cells in human urine was generated. Single-cell transcriptomics enables detection and quantification of almost all types of cells in the kidney and urinary tract.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Boehringer Ingelheim

Gilead

Regeneron

GlaxoSmithKline

University of Pennsylvania

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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