학술논문

Multiplexed droplet single-cell sequencing (Mux-Seq) of normal and transplant kidney
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Transplantation. 22(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Kidney Disease
Transplantation
Biotechnology
Organ Transplantation
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Renal and urogenital
Allografts
Endothelial Cells
Graft Rejection
Humans
Kidney
Kidney Transplantation
basic (laboratory) research
science
kidney (allograft) function
dysfunction
kidney biology
kidney transplantation
nephrology
rejection
translational research
Kidney Precision Medicine Project
basic (laboratory) research/science
kidney (allograft) function/dysfunction
kidney transplantation/nephrology
translational research/science
Medical and Health Sciences
Surgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Maintenance of systemic homeostasis by kidney requires the coordinated response of diverse cell types. The use of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) for patient tissue samples remains fraught with difficulties with cell isolation, purity, and experimental bias. The ability to characterize immune and parenchymal cells during transplant rejection will be invaluable in defining transplant pathology where tissue availability is restricted to needle biopsy fragments. Herein, we present feasibility data for multiplexing approach for droplet scRNAseq (Mux-Seq). Mux-Seq has the potential to minimize experimental batch bias and variation even with very small sample input. In this first proof-of-concept study for this approach, explant tissues from six normal and two transplant recipients after multiple early post-transplant rejection episodes leading to nephrectomy due to aggressive antibody mediated rejection, were pooled for Mux-Seq. A computational tool, Demuxlet was applied for demultiplexing the individual cells from the pooled experiment. Each sample was also applied individually in a single microfluidic run (singleplex) to correlate results with the pooled data from the same sample. Our applied protocol demonstrated that data from Mux-Seq correlated highly with singleplex (Pearson coefficient 0.982) sequencing results, with the ability to identify many known and novel kidney cell types including different infiltrating immune cells. Trajectory analysis of proximal tubule and endothelial cells demonstrated separation between healthy and injured kidney from transplant explant suggesting evolving stages of cell- specific differentiation in alloimmune injury. This study provides the technical groundwork for understanding the pathogenesis of alloimmune injury and host tissue response in transplant rejection and normal human kidney and provides a protocol for optimized processing precious and low input human kidney biopsy tissue for larger scale studies.