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A comparative study of cellular diversity between the Xenopuspronephric and mouse metanephric nephron

Authors :
Corkins, Mark E.
Achieng, MaryAnne
DeLay, Bridget D.
Krneta-Stankic, Vanja
Cain, Margo P.
Walker, Brandy L.
Chen, Jichao
Lindström, Nils O.
Miller, Rachel K.
Source :
Kidney International; January 2023, Vol. 103 Issue: 1 p77-86, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The kidney is an essential organ that ensures bodily fluid homeostasis and removes soluble waste products from the organism. Nephrons, the functional units of the kidney, comprise a blood filter, the glomerulus or glomus, and an epithelial tubule that processes the filtrate from the blood or coelom and selectively reabsorbs solutes, such as sugars, proteins, ions, and water, leaving waste products to be eliminated in the urine. Genes coding for transporters are segmentally expressed, enabling the nephron to sequentially process the filtrate. The Xenopusembryonic kidney, the pronephros, which consists of a single large nephron, has served as a valuable model to identify genes involved in nephron formation and patterning. Therefore, the developmental patterning program that generates these segments is of great interest. Prior work has defined the gene expression profiles of Xenopusnephron segments via in situhybridization strategies, but a comprehensive understanding of the cellular makeup of the pronephric kidney remains incomplete. Here, we carried out single-cell mRNA sequencing of the functional Xenopuspronephric nephron and evaluated its cellular composition through comparative analyses with previous Xenopusstudies and single-cell mRNA sequencing of the adult mouse kidney. This study reconstructs the cellular makeup of the pronephric kidney and identifies conserved cells, segments, and associated gene expression profiles. Thus, our data highlight significant conservation in podocytes, proximal and distal tubule cells, and divergence in cellular composition underlying the capacity of each nephron to remove wastes in the form of urine, while emphasizing the Xenopuspronephros as a model for physiology and disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00852538 and 15231755
Volume :
103
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Kidney International
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs61495670
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2022.07.027