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Spatial transcriptomics defines injury-specific microenvironments in the adult mouse kidney and novel cellular interactions in regeneration and disease.

Michal PolonskyLouisa M S GerhardtJina YunKari KoppitchKatsuya Lex ColónHenry AmrheinShiwei ZhengGuo-Cheng YuanMatt ThomsonLong CaiAndrew P McMahon
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Kidney injury disrupts the intricate renal architecture and triggers limited regeneration, and injury-invoked inflammation and fibrosis. Deciphering molecular pathways and cellular interactions driving these processes is challenging due to the complex renal architecture. Here, we applied single cell spatial transcriptomics to examine ischemia-reperfusion injury in the mouse kidney. Spatial transcriptomics revealed injury-specific and spatially-dependent gene expression patterns in distinct cellular microenvironments within the kidney and predicted Clcf1-Crfl1 in a molecular interplay between persistently injured proximal tubule cells and neighboring fibroblasts. Immune cell types play a critical role in organ repair. Spatial analysis revealed cellular microenvironments resembling early tertiary lymphoid structures and identified associated molecular pathways. Collectively, this study supports a focus on molecular interactions in cellular microenvironments to enhance understanding of injury, repair and disease. One-Sentence Summary: Spatial transcriptomics predicted a molecular interplay amongst neighboring cell-types in the injured mammalian kidney Main Text.
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