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1.
Development ; 151(18)2024 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39344436

ABSTRACT

In the developing mammalian kidney, nephron formation is initiated by a subset of nephron progenitor cells (NPCs). Wnt input activates a ß-catenin (Ctnnb1)-driven, transcriptional nephrogenic program and the mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET) of NPCs. Using an in vitro mouse NPC culture model, we observed that activation of the Wnt pathway results in the aggregation of induced NPCs, which is an initiating step in the MET program. Genetic removal showed aggregation was dependent on ß-catenin. Modulating extracellular Ca2+ levels showed cell-cell contacts were Ca2+ dependent, suggesting a role for cadherin (Cdh)-directed cell adhesion. Molecular analysis identified Cdh2, Cdh4 and Cdh11 in NPCs, and the ß-catenin directed upregulation of Cdh3 and Cdh4 accompanying the MET of induced NPCs. Mutational analysis of ß-catenin supported a role for a Lef/Tcf-ß-catenin-mediated transcriptional response in the cell aggregation process. Genetic removal of all four cadherins, and independent removal of α-catenin or of ß-catenin-α-catenin interactions, abolished aggregation, but not the inductive response to Wnt pathway activation. These findings, and data in an accompanying article highlight the role of ß-catenin in linking transcriptional programs to the morphogenesis of NPCs in mammalian nephrogenesis.


Subject(s)
Cadherins , Cell Aggregation , Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition , Nephrons , Stem Cells , Wnt Signaling Pathway , beta Catenin , Animals , Cadherins/metabolism , Cadherins/genetics , Nephrons/metabolism , Nephrons/cytology , Stem Cells/metabolism , Stem Cells/cytology , beta Catenin/metabolism , beta Catenin/genetics , Mice , Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition/genetics , Cell Adhesion , Wnt Proteins/metabolism , Wnt Proteins/genetics , Cells, Cultured
2.
Development ; 151(18)2024 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39250420

ABSTRACT

In vivo and in vitro studies argue that concentration-dependent Wnt signaling regulates mammalian nephron progenitor cell (NPC) programs. Canonical Wnt signaling is regulated through the stabilization of ß-catenin, a transcriptional co-activator when complexed with Lef/Tcf DNA-binding partners. Using the GSK3ß inhibitor CHIR99021 (CHIR) to block GSK3ß-dependent destruction of ß-catenin, we examined dose-dependent responses to ß-catenin in mouse NPCs, using mRNA transduction to modify gene expression. Low CHIR-dependent proliferation of NPCs was blocked on ß-catenin removal, with evidence of NPCs arresting at the G2-M transition. While NPC identity was maintained following ß-catenin removal, mRNA-seq identified low CHIR and ß-catenin dependent genes. High CHIR activated nephrogenesis. Nephrogenic programming was dependent on Lef/Tcf factors and ß-catenin transcriptional activity. Molecular and cellular features of early nephrogenesis were driven in the absence of CHIR by a mutated stabilized form of ß-catenin. Chromatin association studies indicate low and high CHIR response genes are likely direct targets of canonical Wnt transcriptional complexes. Together, these studies provide evidence for concentration-dependent Wnt signaling in the regulation of NPCs and provide new insight into Wnt targets initiating mammalian nephrogenesis.


Subject(s)
Nephrons , Stem Cells , Wnt Signaling Pathway , beta Catenin , Animals , Nephrons/metabolism , Nephrons/cytology , beta Catenin/metabolism , Mice , Stem Cells/metabolism , Stem Cells/cytology , Pyrimidines/pharmacology , Pyridines/pharmacology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Cell Proliferation , Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta/metabolism , Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta/genetics , Organogenesis/genetics , Transcription, Genetic
3.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 7010, 2024 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39237549

ABSTRACT

Kidney injury disrupts the intricate renal architecture and triggers limited regeneration, together with injury-invoked inflammation and fibrosis. Deciphering the molecular pathways and cellular interactions driving these processes is challenging due to the complex tissue structure. Here, we apply single cell spatial transcriptomics to examine ischemia-reperfusion injury in the mouse kidney. Spatial transcriptomics reveals injury-specific and spatially-dependent gene expression patterns in distinct cellular microenvironments within the kidney and predicts Clcf1-Crfl1 in a molecular interplay between persistently injured proximal tubule cells and their neighboring fibroblasts. Immune cell types play a critical role in organ repair. Spatial analysis identifies cellular microenvironments resembling early tertiary lymphoid structures and associated molecular pathways. Collectively, this study supports a focus on molecular interactions in cellular microenvironments to enhance understanding of injury, repair and disease.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication , Cellular Microenvironment , Kidney , Regeneration , Reperfusion Injury , Transcriptome , Animals , Mice , Regeneration/genetics , Reperfusion Injury/metabolism , Reperfusion Injury/genetics , Reperfusion Injury/pathology , Kidney/metabolism , Kidney/pathology , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/metabolism , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/pathology , Male , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling , Single-Cell Analysis , Fibrosis
4.
Dev Cell ; 2024 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39216481

ABSTRACT

Tendons, which transmit force from muscles to bones, are highly prone to injury. Understanding the mechanisms driving tendon fate would impact efforts to improve tendon healing, yet this knowledge is limited. To find direct regulators of tendon progenitor emergence, we performed a zebrafish high-throughput chemical screen. We established forskolin as a tenogenic inducer across vertebrates, functioning through Creb1a, which is required and sufficient for tendon fate. Putative enhancers containing cyclic AMP (cAMP) response elements (CREs) in humans, mice, and fish drove specific expression in zebrafish cranial and fin tendons. Analysis of these genomic regions identified motifs for early B cell factor (Ebf/EBF) transcription factors. Mutation of CRE or Ebf/EBF motifs significantly disrupted enhancer activity and specificity in tendons. Zebrafish ebf1a/ebf3a mutants displayed defects in tendon formation. Notably, Creb1a/CREB1 and Ebf1a/Ebf3a/EBF1 overexpression facilitated tenogenic induction in zebrafish and human pluripotent stem cells. Together, our work identifies the functional conservation of two transcription factors in promoting tendon fate.

5.
Dev Cell ; 2024 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39121855

ABSTRACT

The mammalian kidney maintains fluid homeostasis through diverse epithelial cell types generated from nephron and ureteric progenitor cells. To extend a developmental understanding of the kidney's epithelial networks, we compared chromatin organization (single-nuclear assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing [ATAC-seq]; 112,864 nuclei) and gene expression (single-cell/nuclear RNA sequencing [RNA-seq]; 109,477 cells/nuclei) in the developing human (10.6-17.6 weeks; n = 10) and mouse (post-natal day [P]0; n = 10) kidney, supplementing analysis with published mouse datasets from earlier stages. Single-cell/nuclear datasets were analyzed at a species level, and then nephron and ureteric cellular lineages were extracted and integrated into a common, cross-species, multimodal dataset. Comparative computational analyses identified conserved and divergent features of chromatin organization and linked gene activity, identifying species-specific and cell-type-specific regulatory programs. In situ validation of human-enriched gene activity points to human-specific signaling interactions in kidney development. Further, human-specific enhancer regions were linked to kidney diseases through genome-wide association studies (GWASs), highlighting the potential for clinical insight from developmental modeling.

6.
Cell Stem Cell ; 31(6): 921-939.e17, 2024 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38692273

ABSTRACT

Nephron progenitor cells (NPCs) self-renew and differentiate into nephrons, the functional units of the kidney. Here, manipulation of p38 and YAP activity allowed for long-term clonal expansion of primary mouse and human NPCs and induced NPCs (iNPCs) from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). Molecular analyses demonstrated that cultured iNPCs closely resemble primary human NPCs. iNPCs generated nephron organoids with minimal off-target cell types and enhanced maturation of podocytes relative to published human kidney organoid protocols. Surprisingly, the NPC culture medium uncovered plasticity in human podocyte programs, enabling podocyte reprogramming to an NPC-like state. Scalability and ease of genome editing facilitated genome-wide CRISPR screening in NPC culture, uncovering genes associated with kidney development and disease. Further, NPC-directed modeling of autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) identified a small-molecule inhibitor of cystogenesis. These findings highlight a broad application for the reported iNPC platform in the study of kidney development, disease, plasticity, and regeneration.


Subject(s)
Nephrons , Organoids , Animals , Organoids/cytology , Organoids/metabolism , Humans , Nephrons/cytology , Mice , Cell Differentiation , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Podocytes/metabolism , Podocytes/cytology , Kidney/pathology , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/pathology , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/metabolism , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/genetics , Models, Biological , Gene Editing
7.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Nov 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38045285

ABSTRACT

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.

8.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37662369

ABSTRACT

Wnt regulated transcriptional programs are associated with both the maintenance of mammalian nephron progenitor cells (NPC) and their induction, initiating the process of nephrogenesis. How opposing transcriptional roles are regulated remain unclear. Using an in vitro model replicating in vivo events, we examined the requirement for canonical Wnt transcriptional complexes in NPC regulation. In canonical transcription, Lef/Tcf DNA binding proteins associate the transcriptional co-activator ß-catenin. Wnt signaling is readily substituted by CHIR99021, a small molecule antagonist of glycogen synthase kinase-3ß (GSK3ß). GSK3ß inhibition blocks Gskß-dependent turnover of ß-catenin, enabling formation of Lef/Tcf/ß-catenin transcriptional complexes, and enhancer-mediated transcriptional activation. Removal of ß-catenin activity from NPCs under cell expansion conditions (low CHIR) demonstrated a non-transcriptional role for ß-catenin in the CHIR-dependent proliferation of NPCs. In contrast, CHIR-mediated induction of nephrogenesis, on switching from low to high CHIR, was dependent on Lef/Tcf and ß-catenin transcriptional activity. These studies point to a non-transcriptional mechanism for ß-catenin in regulation of NPCs, and potentially other stem progenitor cell types. Further, analysis of the ß-catenin-directed transcriptional response provides new insight into induction of nephrogenesis. Summary Statement: The study provides a mechanistic understanding of Wnt/ ß-catenin activity in self-renewal and differentiation of mammalian nephron progenitors.

9.
Dev Cell ; 58(21): 2338-2358.e5, 2023 11 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37673062

ABSTRACT

Mammalian organs exhibit distinct physiology, disease susceptibility, and injury responses between the sexes. In the mouse kidney, sexually dimorphic gene activity maps predominantly to proximal tubule (PT) segments. Bulk RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data demonstrated that sex differences were established from 4 and 8 weeks after birth under gonadal control. Hormone injection studies and genetic removal of androgen and estrogen receptors demonstrated androgen receptor (AR)-mediated regulation of gene activity in PT cells as the regulatory mechanism. Interestingly, caloric restriction feminizes the male kidney. Single-nuclear multiomic analysis identified putative cis-regulatory regions and cooperating factors mediating PT responses to AR activity in the mouse kidney. In the human kidney, a limited set of genes showed conserved sex-linked regulation, whereas analysis of the mouse liver underscored organ-specific differences in the regulation of sexually dimorphic gene expression. These findings raise interesting questions on the evolution, physiological significance, disease, and metabolic linkage of sexually dimorphic gene activity.


Subject(s)
Kidney , Receptors, Androgen , Animals , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , Gene Expression , Gene Expression Regulation , Kidney/metabolism , Mammals/metabolism , Receptors, Androgen/genetics , Receptors, Androgen/metabolism , Sex Characteristics
10.
APL Bioeng ; 7(3): 036106, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37584027

ABSTRACT

Drug-induced nephrotoxicity is a leading cause of drug attrition, partly due to the limited relevance of pre-clinical models of the proximal tubule. Culturing proximal tubule epithelial cells (PTECs) under fluid flow to mimic physiological shear stress has been shown to improve select phenotypes, but existing flow systems are expensive and difficult to implement by non-experts in microfluidics. Here, we designed and fabricated an accessible and modular flow system for culturing PTECs under physiological shear stress, which induced native-like cuboidal morphology, downregulated pathways associated with hypoxia, stress, and injury, and upregulated xenobiotic metabolism pathways. We also compared the expression profiles of shear-dependent genes in our in vitro PTEC tissues to that of ex vivo proximal tubules and observed stronger clustering between ex vivo proximal tubules and PTECs under physiological shear stress relative to PTECs under negligible shear stress. Together, these data illustrate the utility of our user-friendly flow system and highlight the role of shear stress in promoting native-like morphological and transcriptomic phenotypes in PTECs in vitro, which is critical for developing more relevant pre-clinical models of the proximal tubule for drug screening or disease modeling.

11.
bioRxiv ; 2023 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37293038

ABSTRACT

Nephron progenitor cells (NPCs) self-renew and differentiate into nephrons, the functional units of the kidney. Here we report manipulation of p38 and YAP activity creates a synthetic niche that allows the long-term clonal expansion of primary mouse and human NPCs, and induced NPCs (iNPCs) from human pluripotent stem cells. Cultured iNPCs resemble closely primary human NPCs, generating nephron organoids with abundant distal convoluted tubule cells, which are not observed in published kidney organoids. The synthetic niche reprograms differentiated nephron cells into NPC state, recapitulating the plasticity of developing nephron in vivo. Scalability and ease of genome-editing in the cultured NPCs allow for genome-wide CRISPR screening, identifying novel genes associated with kidney development and disease. A rapid, efficient, and scalable organoid model for polycystic kidney disease was derived directly from genome-edited NPCs, and validated in drug screen. These technological platforms have broad applications to kidney development, disease, plasticity, and regeneration.

12.
bioRxiv ; 2023 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37293066

ABSTRACT

Mammalian kidneys maintain fluid homeostasis through the cellular activity of nephrons and the conjoined collecting system. Each epithelial network originates from distinct progenitor cell populations that reciprocally interact during development. To extend our understanding of human and mouse kidney development, we profiled chromatin organization (ATAC-seq) and gene expression (RNA-seq) in developing human and mouse kidneys. Data were analyzed at a species level and then integrated into a common, cross-species multimodal data set. Comparative analysis of cell types and developmental trajectories identified conserved and divergent features of chromatin organization and linked gene activity, revealing species- and cell-type specific regulatory programs. Identification of human-specific enhancer regions linked through GWAS studies to kidney disease highlights the potential of developmental modeling to provide clinical insight.

13.
bioRxiv ; 2023 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37205355

ABSTRACT

Mammalian organs exhibit distinct physiology, disease susceptibility and injury responses between the sexes. In the mouse kidney, sexually dimorphic gene activity maps predominantly to proximal tubule (PT) segments. Bulk RNA-seq data demonstrated sex differences were established from 4 and 8 weeks after birth under gonadal control. Hormone injection studies and genetic removal of androgen and estrogen receptors demonstrated androgen receptor (AR) mediated regulation of gene activity in PT cells as the regulatory mechanism. Interestingly, caloric restriction feminizes the male kidney. Single-nuclear multiomic analysis identified putative cis-regulatory regions and cooperating factors mediating PT responses to AR activity in the mouse kidney. In the human kidney, a limited set of genes showed conserved sex-linked regulation while analysis of the mouse liver underscored organ-specific differences in the regulation of sexually dimorphic gene expression. These findings raise interesting questions on the evolution, physiological significance, and disease and metabolic linkage, of sexually dimorphic gene activity.

14.
Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens ; 32(4): 352-358, 2023 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37074682

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in approximately 10-15% of patients admitted to hospital and is associated with adverse clinical outcomes. Despite recent advances, management of patients with AKI is still mainly supportive, including the avoidance of nephrotoxins, volume and haemodynamic management and renal replacement therapy. A better understanding of the renal response to injury is the prerequisite to overcome current limitations in AKI diagnostics and therapy. RECENT FINDINGS: Single-cell technologies provided new opportunities to study the complexity of the kidney and have been instrumental for rapid advancements in the understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms of AKI. SUMMARY: We provide an update on single-cell technologies and we summarize the recent discoveries on the cellular response to injury in proximal tubule cells from the early response in AKI, to the mechanisms of tubule repair and the relevance of maladaptive tubule repair in the transition to chronic kidney disease.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Humans , Transcriptome , Kidney Tubules, Proximal , Kidney , Acute Kidney Injury/genetics , Acute Kidney Injury/therapy , Acute Kidney Injury/complications , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/complications
15.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 34(4): 554-571, 2023 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36735940

ABSTRACT

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Understanding the mechanisms underlying adaptive and maladaptive renal repair after AKI and their long-term consequences is critical to kidney health. The authors used lineage tracing of cycling cells and single-nucleus multiomics (profiling transcriptome and chromatin accessibility) after AKI. They demonstrated that AKI triggers a cell-cycle response in most epithelial and nonepithelial kidney cell types. They also showed that maladaptive proinflammatory proximal tubule cells (PTCs) persist until 6 months post-AKI, although they decreased in abundance over time, in part, through cell death. Single-nucleus multiomics of lineage-traced cells revealed regulatory features of adaptive and maladaptive repair. These included activation of cell state-specific transcription factors and cis-regulatory elements, and effects in PTCs even after adaptive repair, weeks after the injury event. BACKGROUND: AKI triggers a proliferative response as part of an intrinsic cellular repair program, which can lead to adaptive renal repair, restoring kidney structure and function, or maladaptive repair with the persistence of injured proximal tubule cells (PTCs) and an altered kidney structure. However, the cellular and molecular understanding of these repair programs is limited. METHODS: To examine chromatin and transcriptional responses in the same cell upon ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), we combined genetic fate mapping of cycling ( Ki67+ ) cells labeled early after IRI with single-nucleus multiomics-profiling transcriptome and chromatin accessibility in the same nucleus-and generated a dataset of 83,315 nuclei. RESULTS: AKI triggered a broad cell cycle response preceded by cell type-specific and global transcriptional changes in the nephron, the collecting and vascular systems, and stromal and immune cell types. We observed a heterogeneous population of maladaptive PTCs throughout proximal tubule segments 6 months post-AKI, with a marked loss of maladaptive cells from 4 weeks to 6 months. Gene expression and chromatin accessibility profiling in the same nuclei highlighted differences between adaptive and maladaptive PTCs in the activity of cis-regulatory elements and transcription factors, accompanied by corresponding changes in target gene expression. Adaptive repair was associated with reduced expression of genes encoding transmembrane transport proteins essential to kidney function. CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of genome organization and gene activity with single-cell resolution using lineage tracing and single-nucleus multiomics offers new insight into the regulation of renal injury repair. Weeks to months after mild-to-moderate IRI, maladaptive PTCs persist with an aberrant epigenetic landscape, and PTCs exhibit an altered transcriptional profile even following adaptive repair.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Reperfusion Injury , Humans , Multiomics , Kidney/metabolism , Acute Kidney Injury/metabolism , Reperfusion Injury/metabolism , Transcription Factors/genetics , Chromatin/genetics
16.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38654822

ABSTRACT

In the developing mammalian kidney, nephron formation is initiated by a subset of nephron progenitor cells (NPCs). Wnt input activates a ß-catenin ( Ctnnb1 )-driven, transcriptional nephrogenic program. In conjunction, induced mesenchymal NPCs transition through a pre-tubular aggregate to an epithelial renal vesicle, the precursor for each nephron. How this critical mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition (MET) is regulated is unclear. In an in vitro mouse NPC culture model, activation of the Wnt pathway results in the aggregation of induced NPCs into closely-packed, cell clusters. Genetic removal of ß-catenin resulted in a failure of both Wnt pathway-directed transcriptional activation and the formation of aggregated cell clusters. Modulating extracellular Ca 2+ levels showed cell-cell contacts were Ca 2+ -dependent, suggesting a role for cadherin (Cdh)-directed cell adhesion. Molecular analysis identified Cdh2 , Cdh4 and Cdh11 in uninduced NPCs and the up-regulation of Cdh3 and Cdh4 accompanying the Wnt pathway-induced MET. Genetic removal of all four cadherins, and independent removal of α-catenin, which couples Cdh-ß-catenin membrane complexes to the actin cytoskeleton, abolished cell aggregation in response to Wnt pathway activation. However, the ß-catenin driven inductive transcriptional program was unaltered. Together with the accompanying paper (Bugacov et al ., submitted), these data demonstrate that distinct cellular activities of ß-catenin - transcriptional regulation and cell adhesion - combine in the mammalian kidney programs generating differentiated epithelial nephron precursors from mesenchymal nephron progenitors. Summary statement: Our study highlights the role of Wnt-ß-catenin pathway regulation of cadherin-mediated cell adhesion in the mesenchymal to epithelial transition of induced nephron progenitor cells.

17.
Semin Nephrol ; 42(3): 151286, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36402654

ABSTRACT

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a highly prevalent, heterogeneous syndrome, associated with increased short- and long-term mortality. A multitude of different factors cause AKI including ischemia, sepsis, nephrotoxic drugs, and urinary tract obstruction. Upon injury, the kidney initiates an intrinsic repair program that can result in adaptive repair with regeneration of damaged nephrons and functional recovery of epithelial activity, or maladaptive repair and persistence of damaged epithelial cells with a characteristic proinflammatory, profibrotic molecular signature. Maladaptive repair is linked to disease progression from AKI to chronic kidney disease. Despite extensive efforts, no therapeutic strategies provide consistent benefit to AKI patients. Since kidney biopsies are rarely performed in the acute injury phase in humans, most of our understanding of AKI pathophysiology is derived from preclinical AKI models. This raises the question of how well experimental models of AKI reflect the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying human AKI? Here, we provide a brief overview of available AKI models, discuss their strengths and limitations, and consider important aspects of the AKI response in mice and humans, with a particular focus on the role of proximal tubule cells in adaptive and maladaptive repair.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic , Humans , Mice , Animals , Acute Kidney Injury/etiology , Kidney/pathology , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/complications , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/pathology , Nephrons/pathology
18.
Cell Rep ; 40(10): 111315, 2022 09 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36070691

ABSTRACT

The transcriptional regulator Runx2 (runt-related transcription factor 2) has essential but distinct roles in osteoblasts and chondrocytes in skeletal development. However, Runx2-mediated regulatory mechanisms underlying the distinctive programming of osteoblasts and chondrocytes are not well understood. Here, we perform an integrative analysis to investigate Runx2-DNA binding and chromatin accessibility ex vivo using neonatal osteoblasts and chondrocytes. We find that Runx2 engages with cell-type-distinct chromatin-accessible regions, potentially interacting with different combinations of transcriptional regulators, forming cell-type-specific hotspots, and potentiating chromatin accessibility. Genetic analysis and direct cellular reprogramming studies suggest that Runx2 is essential for establishment of chromatin accessibility in osteoblasts. Functional enhancer studies identify an Sp7 distal enhancer driven by Runx2-dependent binding and osteoblast-specific chromatin accessibility, contributing to normal osteoblast differentiation. Our findings provide a framework for understanding the regulatory landscape encompassing Runx2-mediated and cell-type-distinct enhancer networks that underlie the specification of osteoblasts.


Subject(s)
Chromatin , Core Binding Factor Alpha 1 Subunit , Osteoblasts , Animals , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Chromatin/metabolism , Core Binding Factor Alpha 1 Subunit/genetics , Core Binding Factor Alpha 1 Subunit/metabolism , Mice , Osteoblasts/metabolism , Osteogenesis
19.
Open Biol ; 12(8): 220149, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35946312

ABSTRACT

Organ functions are highly specialized and interdependent. Secreted factors regulate organ development and mediate homeostasis through serum trafficking and inter-organ communication. Enzyme-catalysed proximity labelling enables the identification of proteins within a specific cellular compartment. Here, we report a BirA*G3 mouse strain that enables CRE-dependent promiscuous biotinylation of proteins trafficking through the endoplasmic reticulum. When broadly activated throughout the mouse, widespread labelling of proteins was observed within the secretory pathway. Streptavidin affinity purification and peptide mapping by quantitative mass spectrometry (MS) proteomics revealed organ-specific secretory profiles and serum trafficking. As expected, secretory proteomes were highly enriched for signal peptide-containing proteins, highlighting both conventional and non-conventional secretory processes, and ectodomain shedding. Lower-abundance proteins with hormone-like properties were recovered and validated using orthogonal approaches. Hepatocyte-specific activation of BirA*G3 highlighted liver-specific biotinylated secretome profiles. The BirA*G3 mouse model demonstrates enhanced labelling efficiency and tissue specificity over viral transduction approaches and will facilitate a deeper understanding of secretory protein interplay in development, and in healthy and diseased adult states.


Subject(s)
Models, Genetic , Secretome , Animals , Biotinylation , Mammals , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Mice , Proteomics/methods
20.
Cell Stem Cell ; 29(7): 1083-1101.e7, 2022 07 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35803227

ABSTRACT

Human pluripotent stem-cell-derived organoids are models for human development and disease. We report a modified human kidney organoid system that generates thousands of similar organoids, each consisting of 1-2 nephron-like structures. Single-cell transcriptomic profiling and immunofluorescence validation highlighted patterned nephron-like structures utilizing similar pathways, with distinct morphogenesis, to human nephrogenesis. To examine this platform for therapeutic screening, the polycystic kidney disease genes PKD1 and PKD2 were inactivated by gene editing. PKD1 and PKD2 mutant models exhibited efficient and reproducible cyst formation. Cystic outgrowths could be propagated for months to centimeter-sized cysts. To shed new light on cystogenesis, 247 protein kinase inhibitors (PKIs) were screened in a live imaging assay identifying compounds blocking cyst formation but not overall organoid growth. Scaling and further development of the organoid platform will enable a broader capability for kidney disease modeling and high-throughput drug screens.


Subject(s)
Cysts , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant , Cysts/metabolism , Drug Discovery , Humans , Kidney/metabolism , Organoids/metabolism , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/drug therapy , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/genetics , Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant/metabolism , TRPP Cation Channels/genetics , TRPP Cation Channels/metabolism
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