Spatiotemporal Landscape of Kidney Tubular Responses to Glomerular Proteinuria

J Am Soc Nephrol. 2024 Apr 24. doi: 10.1681/ASN.0000000000000357. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Large increases in glomerular protein filtration induce major changes in body homeostasis and increase risk of kidney functional decline and cardiovascular disease. We investigated how elevated protein exposure modifies the landscape of tubular function along the entire nephron, to understand the cellular changes that mediate these important clinical phenomena.

Methods: We conducted single nuclei RNA sequencing, functional intravital imaging, and antibody staining to spatially map transport processes along the mouse kidney tubule. We then delineated how these were altered in a transgenic mouse model of inducible glomerular proteinuria (POD-ATTAC) at 7 and 28 days.

Results: Glomerular proteinuria activated large-scale and pleotropic changes in gene expression in all major nephron sections. Extension of protein uptake from early (S1) to later (S2) parts of the proximal tubule initially triggered dramatic expansion of a hybrid S1/2 population, followed by injury and failed repair, with the cumulative effect of loss of canonical S2 functions. Proteinuria also induced acute injury in S3. Meanwhile, overflow of luminal proteins to the distal tubule caused transcriptional convergence between specialized regions and generalized dedifferentiation.

Conclusions: Proteinuria modulated cell signaling in tubular epithelia and causes distinct patterns of remodeling and injury in a segment specific manner.