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Urine Proteomics and Renal Single Cell Transcriptomics Implicate IL-16 in Lupus Nephritis

Fava, Andrea; Rao, Deepak A; Mohan, Chandra; Zhang, Ting; Rosenberg, Avi; Fenaroli, Paride; Belmont, H Michael; Izmirly, Peter; Clancy, Robert; Monroy Trujillo, Jose; Fine, Derek; Arazi, Arnon; Berthier, Celine C; Davidson, Anne; James, Judith A; Diamond, Betty; Hacohen, Nir; Wofsy, David; Raychaudhuri, Soumya; Apruzzese, William; Buyon, Jill; Petri, Michelle
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Current treatments are effective only in 30% of lupus nephritis patients emphasizing the need for novel therapeutic strategies. To develop mechanistic hypotheses and explore novel biomarkers, we analyzed the longitudinal urinary proteomic profiles in patients with lupus nephritis undergoing treatment. METHODS:We quantified 1,000 urinary proteins in 30 patients with lupus nephritis at the time of the diagnostic renal biopsy and after 3, 6, and 12 months. The proteins and molecular pathways detected in the urine proteome were then analyzed with respect to baseline clinical features and longitudinal trajectories. The intrarenal expression of candidate biomarkers was evaluated using single cell transcriptomics of renal biopsies from lupus nephritis patients. RESULTS:Our analysis revealed multiple biological pathways including chemotaxis, neutrophil activation, platelet degranulation, and extracellular matrix organization that could be noninvasively quantified and monitored in the urine. We identified 237 urinary biomarkers associated with lupus nephritis as compared to controls without SLE. IL-16, CD163, and TGF-β mirrored intrarenal nephritis activity. Response to treatment was paralleled by a reduction of urinary IL-16, a CD4 ligand with proinflammatory and chemotactic properties. Single cell RNA sequencing independently demonstrated that IL16 is the second most expressed cytokine by most infiltrating immune cells in lupus nephritis kidneys. IL-16 producing cells were found at key sites of kidney injury. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Urine proteomics may profoundly change the diagnosis and management of lupus nephritis by noninvasively monitor active intrarenal biological pathways. These findings implicate IL-16 in lupus nephritis pathogenesis designating it as a potentially treatable target and biomarker.
PMID: 34783463
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5049062

High Systemic Type I Interferon Activity is Associated with Active Class III/IV Lupus Nephritis

Iwamoto, Taro; Dorschner, Jessica M; Selvaraj, Shanmugapriya; Mezzano, Valeria; Jensen, Mark A; Vsetecka, Danielle; Amin, Shreyasee; Makol, Ashima; Osborn, Thomas; Moder, Kevin; Chowdhary, Vaidehi R; Izmirly, Peter; Belmont, H Michael; Clancy, Robert M; Buyon, Jill P; Wu, Ming; Loomis, Cynthia A; Niewold, Timothy B
OBJECTIVE:Previous studies suggest a link between high serum type I interferon (IFN) and lupus nephritis (LN). We determined whether serum IFN activity is associated with subtypes of LN and studied renal tissues and cells to understand the impact of IFN in LN. METHODS:). Podocyte cell line gene expression was measured by real-time PCR. RESULTS:expression was not closely co-localized with pDCs. IFN directly activated podocyte cell lines to induce chemokines and proapoptotic molecules. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Systemic high IFN is involved in the pathogenesis of severe LN. We do not find co-localization of pDCs with IFN signature in renal tissue, and instead observe the greatest intensity of IFN signature in glomerular areas, which could suggest a blood source of IFN.
PMID: 34782453
ISSN: 0315-162x
CID: 5049012

Evaluation of Immune Response and Disease Status in SLE Patients Following SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination

Izmirly, Peter M; Kim, Mimi Y; Samanovic, Marie; Fernandez-Ruiz, Ruth; Ohana, Sharon; Deonaraine, Kristina K; Engel, Alexis J; Masson, Mala; Xie, Xianhong; Cornelius, Amber R; Herati, Ramin S; Haberman, Rebecca H; Scher, Jose U; Guttmann, Allison; Blank, Rebecca B; Plotz, Benjamin; Haj-Ali, Mayce; Banbury, Brittany; Stream, Sara; Hasan, Ghadeer; Ho, Gary; Rackoff, Paula; Blazer, Ashira D; Tseng, Chung-E; Belmont, H Michael; Saxena, Amit; Mulligan, Mark J; Clancy, Robert M; Buyon, Jill P
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate seroreactivity and disease flares after COVID-19 vaccination in a multi-ethnic/racial cohort of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). METHODS:90 SLE patients and 20 healthy controls receiving a complete COVID-19 vaccine regimen were included. IgG seroreactivity to the SARS-CoV-2 spike receptor-binding domain (RBD) and SARS-CoV-2 microneutralization were used to evaluate B cell responses; IFN-γ production to assess T cell responses was measured by ELISpot. Disease activity was measured by the hybrid SLE disease activity index (SLEDAI) and flares were assigned by the SELENA/SLEDAI flare index. RESULTS:Overall, fully vaccinated SLE patients produced significantly lower IgG antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 spike RBD than controls. Twenty-six SLE patients (28.8%) generated an IgG response below that of the lowest control (<100 units/ml). In logistic regression analyses, the use of any immunosuppressant or prednisone and a normal anti-dsDNA level prior to vaccination associated with decreased vaccine responses. IgG seroreactivity to the SARS-CoV-2 Spike RBD strongly correlated with the SARS-CoV-2 microneutralization titers and antigen-specific IFN-γ production determined by ELISpot. In a subset of patients with poor antibody responses, IFN-γ production was likewise diminished. Pre-/post-vaccination SLEDAI scores were similar. Only 11.4% of patients had a post-vaccination flare; 1.3% were severe. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:In a multi-ethnic/racial study of SLE patients 29% had a low response to the COVID-19 vaccine which was associated with being on immunosuppression. Reassuringly, disease flares were rare. While minimal protective levels remain unknown, these data suggest protocol development is needed to assess efficacy of booster vaccination.
PMCID:8426963
PMID: 34347939
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5046532

Gut dysbiosis and the clinical spectrum in anti-Ro positive mothers of children with neonatal lupus

Clancy, Robert M; Marion, Miranda C; Ainsworth, Hannah C; Chang, Miao; Howard, Timothy D; Izmirly, Peter M; Masson, Mala; Buyon, Jill P; Langefeld, Carl D
Anti-SSA/Ro antibodies, while strongly linked to fetal cardiac injury and neonatal rash, can associate with a spectrum of disease in the mother, ranging from completely asymptomatic to overt Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) or Sjögren's Syndrome (SS). This study was initiated to test the hypothesis that the microbiome, influenced in part by genetics, contributes to disease state. The stool microbiome of healthy controls (HC) was compared to that of anti-SSA/Ro positive women whose children had neonatal lupus. At the time of sampling, these women were either asymptomatic (Asym), had minor rheumatic symptoms or signs considered as an undifferentiated autoimmune syndrome (UAS), or were diagnosed with SLE or SS. Differences in microbial relative abundances among these three groups were tested assuming an ordering in clinical severity (HC<Asym/UAS<SS/SLE) and then again without the ordinal assumption. Those taxa that showed differential relative abundances were then tested for whether the effect size differed depending on the women's HLA SLE-risk allele genotype (DRB1*03:01, DRB1*15:01, DQB1*02:01 and DQB1*06:02) or anti-SSA/Ro autoantibody levels. Multiple genera within the families Ruminococcaceae and Lachnospiraceae showed evidence of an HLA-by-genus interaction (P < .05). Four genera exhibited evidence of an interaction with anti-Ro52 IgA: Lachnoclostridium, Romboutsia, Bacteroides and Actinomyces (P < .01). In addition to documenting differences in microbial relative abundances across clinical severity of disease, these data provide a first-time demonstration that microbial differences are correlated with HLA SLE-risk alleles. Taken together, these data suggest that the clinical spectrum from benign to overt clinical autoimmunity may partially result from or trigger a complex interplay among specific microbial profiles, anti-Ro autoantibodies, and genetics.
PMCID:9225419
PMID: 35704681
ISSN: 1949-0984
CID: 5277852

APOL1 variant-expressing endothelial cells exhibit autophagic dysfunction and mitochondrial stress

Blazer, Ashira; Qian, Yingzhi; Schlegel, Martin Paul; Algasas, Huda; Buyon, Jill P; Cadwell, Ken; Cammer, Michael; Heffron, Sean P; Liang, Feng-Xia; Mehta-Lee, Shilpi; Niewold, Timothy; Rasmussen, Sara E; Clancy, Robert M
Polymorphisms in the Apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1) gene are common in ancestrally African populations, and associate with kidney injury and cardiovascular disease. These risk variants (RV) provide an advantage in resisting Trypanosoma brucei, the causal agent of African trypanosomiasis, and are largely absent from non-African genomes. Clinical associations between the APOL1 high risk genotype (HRG) and disease are stronger in those with comorbid infectious or immune disease. To understand the interaction between cytokine exposure and APOL1 cytotoxicity, we established human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) cultures representing each APOL1 genotype. Untreated HUVECs were compared to IFNÉ£-exposed; and APOL1 expression, mitochondrial function, lysosome integrity, and autophagic flux were measured. IFNÉ£ increased median APOL1 expression across all genotypes 22.1 (8.3 to 29.8) fold (p=0.02). Compared to zero risk variant-carrying HUVECs (0RV), HUVECs carrying 2 risk variant copies (2RV) showed both depressed baseline and maximum mitochondrial oxygen consumption (p<0.01), and impaired mitochondrial networking on MitoTracker assays. These cells also demonstrated a contracted lysosomal compartment, and an accumulation of autophagosomes suggesting a defect in autophagic flux. Upon blocking autophagy with non-selective lysosome inhibitor, hydroxychloroquine, autophagosome accumulation between 0RV HUVECs and untreated 2RV HUVECs was similar, implicating lysosomal dysfunction in the HRG-associated autophagy defect. Compared to 0RV and 2RV HUVECs, HUVECs carrying 1 risk variant copy (1RV) demonstrated intermediate mitochondrial respiration and autophagic flux phenotypes, which were exacerbated with IFNÉ£ exposure. Taken together, our data reveal that IFNÉ£ induces APOL1 expression, and that each additional RV associates with mitochondrial dysfunction and autophagy inhibition. IFNÉ£ amplifies this phenotype even in 1RV HUVECs, representing the first description of APOL1 pathobiology in variant heterozygous cell cultures.
PMCID:9551299
PMID: 36238153
ISSN: 1664-8021
CID: 5361182

PROSPECTIVE EVALUATION OF ANTI-SSA/RO POSITIVE PREGNANCIES TO ADDRESS RISK FACTORS FOR FETAL CARDIAC DISEASE/ADVERSE PREGNANCY OUTCOMES AND EFFICACY OF AMBULATORY FETAL HEART RATE MONITORING (FHRM) AND RAPID TREATMENT OF EMERGENT BLOCK [Meeting Abstract]

Buyon, J; Deonaraine, K; Carlucci, P; Masson, M; Fraser, N; Phoon, C; Roman, A; Izmirly, P; Saxena, A; Belmont, M; Penfield, C; Mi, Lee Y; Nusbaum, J; Solitar, B; Malik, F; Rackoff, P; Haberman, R; Acherman, R; Sinkovskaya, E; Albuhamad, A; Makhoul, M; Satou, G; Pinto, N; Moon-Grady, A; Howley, L; Levasseur, S; Matta, J; Lindblade, C; Rubenstein, A; Haxel, C; Kohari, K; Copel, J; Strainic, J; Doan, T; Bermudez-Wagner, K; Sheth, S S; Killen, S; Tacy, T; Kaplinski, M; Drewes, B; Clancy, R; Cuneo, B
Introduction Fetal cardiac disease is strongly associated with maternal anti-SSA/Ro antibodies, but gaps in our knowledge include the influence of antibody specificity and titer, maternal diagnosis, overall non-cardiac adverse pregnancy outcomes (APOs), optimal surveillance protocols, and efficacy of rapid treatment. Methods The multi-center Surveillance and Treatment To Prevent Fetal AV Block Likely to Occur Quickly (STOP BLOQ) study recruited pregnant women with commercially positive anti-Ro antibodies and stratified them into high and low titers of anti-Ro60 and Ro52 based on a research ELISA, using a cutoff defined by that obtained for 50 mothers with previous AVB offspring. Mothers with anti-Ro60 and/or 52 antibodies at or above 1,000 I.U. were trained to perform FHRM. From 17-25 weeks of gestation, FHRM was completed 3x/day in addition to weekly or biweekly fetal echocardiograms (echo). Mothers texted all audio sounds to the coordinating center. Texts deemed abnormal by mothers were immediately sent to an on call pediatric cardiologist who either reassured if FHRM was normal or referred for emergency fetal echo in < 6 hours if abnormal. Results 250 anti-Ro pregnant women (22% Hispanic, 50% white, 12% Black, 12% Asian, 4% other) have been consented, including 28 whose previous child had AVB. Of mothers tested to date, 153 were provided home monitors given high titer anti-Ro60 and/or 52 antibodies (26 high titer anti-Ro60 alone, 21 high titer anti-Ro52 alone,105 high titer antibodies to both antigens). The 83 patients with low titers were surveilled with echos per local standard of care. Regarding maternal diagnosis, of 161 assessed to date, 39% were asym/UAS, 11% RA, 31% SS, 19% SLE. Antibody titers did not significantly differ by ethnicity, race or diagnosis (table 1). Non-AVB APOs occurred in 18% and were not predicted by Ro60 or 52 titers but rather SLE diagnosis (table 2). In total, 24,759 FHRM audiotexts were received from 131 patients (90 of whom have delivered) during the monitoring period. Of these, 22 were evaluated by the on-call pediatric cardiologist, who prompted an emergency echo (all completed in < 6 hrs). In 11 cases, the emergency echo was normal. In 9, there were premature atrial contractions, confirming the mother's perception. In 2 with 2degree block on urgent echo (both treated per protocol with IVIG and dexamethasone), 1 reverted to normal sinus rhythm and the other progressed to 3degree block. In 2 others, the mother did not perceive abnormal FHRM for > 24 hrs, echo identified 3degree block, and retrospective cardiology review of FHRM audio captures identified an abnormality prior to obtaining the echo. All 4 AVB developed in fetuses of mothers with high titer antibodies to both Ro60 and 52 (mean 32,451 and 34,991 respectively). Of the 18 mothers with a previous AVB child who followed the 400mg hydroxychloroquine PATCH protocol, 1 developed AVB in accord with the results of Step 1 in that study. Conclusion These data support that APOs in this clinically diverse group of mothers are not influenced by anti-Ro titer or specificity, but rather SLE diagnosis. All conduction defects were initially identified by FHRM and in mothers with high titer anti-Ro60 and 52. Hydroxychloroquine continues to show efficacy in reducing the AVB recurrence rate with rapid intervention of emergent block being promising
EMBASE:640016429
ISSN: 2053-8790
CID: 5513372

IMMUNE CELL HETEROGENEITY IN LUPUS NEPHRITIS KIDNEYS AND ITS RELATION TO HISTOPATHOLOGICAL FEATURES: LESSONS FROM THE ACCELERATING MEDICINES PARTNERSHIP (AMP) IN SLE CONSORTIUM [Meeting Abstract]

Arazi, A; Mears, J; Eisenhaure, T M; Xiao, Q; Hoover, P J; Rao, D A; Berthier, C C; Fava, A; Gurajala, S; Peters, M; Jones, T; Sakaue, S; Apruzzese, W; Barnas, J L; Fine, D; Lederer, J; Furie, R; Davidson, A; Hildeman, D A; Woodle, S; James, J A; Guthridge, J M; Dall'Era, M; Wofsy, D; Izmirly, P M; Belmont, H M; Clancy, R; Kamen, D L; Putterman, C; Tuschl, T; McMahon, M A; Grossman, J; Kalunian, K C; Payan-Schober, F; Ishimori, M; Weisman, M; Kretzler, M; Hodgin, J; Brenner, M B; Anolik, J H; Petri, M A; Buyon, J P; Raychaudhuri, S; Hacohen, N; Diamond, B
Background Lupus nephritis (LN) is characterized by considerable variability in its clinical manifestations and histopathological findings. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying this heterogeneity is key for the development of personalized treatments for LN. Methods Droplet-based single-cell RNA-sequencing was applied to the analysis of dissociated kidney samples, collected from 155 LN patients with active kidney disease and 30 living donor controls as part of the Accelerating Medicines Partnership (AMP) in SLE consortium -a large-scale, multi-center study. 73,440 immune cells passing quality control were identified, spanning 134 cell subsets, representing various populations of tissue-resident and infiltrating leukocytes, as well as the activation states these cells assume as part of their diseaserelated activation and differentiation (figure 1). Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to characterize the variability in cell subset frequencies across the LN patients. Relationships between the resulting principal components (PCs) and the demographic, clinical and histopathological features of the patients were then assessed. Results The main source of variability in immune cell subset frequencies, as represented by the first PC (PC1), reflected the balance between lymphocytes and monocytes/macrophages. Subsequent PCs represented the balance between B cells and T cells (PC2); the levels of cytotoxic T lymphocytes and NK cells, as compared to plasma cells (PC3); and the degree of macrophage differentiation to an alternatively activated phagocytic profile (PC4). PC1 was significantly correlated with the Chronicity index, such that patients with a higher percentage of lymphocytes compared to monocytes/macrophages had a higher Chronicity score (rho = -0.422, p-value < 0.001; figure 2A). A high degree of macrophage differentiation, as represented by PC4, was associated with a high Activity score (rho = 0.387, p-value < 0.001; figure 2B), and, in addition, with proliferative or mixed histology class, compared to pure membranous nephritis (p-value = 0.001, Kruskal-Wallis test). The ratio of B cells to T cells, as represented by PC2, demonstrated a positive correlation with the Activity index (rho = 0.311, p-value < 0.001). We further identified a significant correlation of PC1 with age; specifically, older patients had a higher relative frequency of lymphocytes compared to monocytes/macrophages (rho = -0.239, p-value = 0.003). Our analysis indicated that these relations are not driven by demographic, clinical and technical sources of variation in our data, including race, ethnicity, the mixture of different nephritic classes, and the inclusion of both first and later biopsies. Conclusion Our work identifies distinct leukocyte populations active in different LN patients and, possibly, different stages of disease, and points to potential therapeutic targets, that must be validated in mechanistic studies. This approach may pave the way to personalized treatment of LN
EMBASE:640016139
ISSN: 2053-8790
CID: 5513542

Autoimmune anti-DNA and anti-phosphatidylserine antibodies predict development of severe COVID-19

Gomes, Claudia; Zuniga, Marisol; Crotty, Kelly A; Qian, Kun; Tovar, Nubia Catalina; Lin, Lawrence Hsu; Argyropoulos, Kimon V; Clancy, Robert; Izmirly, Peter; Buyon, Jill; Lee, David C; Yasnot-Acosta, Maria Fernanda; Li, Huilin; Cotzia, Paolo; Rodriguez, Ana
High levels of autoimmune antibodies are observed in COVID-19 patients but their specific contribution to disease severity and clinical manifestations remains poorly understood. We performed a retrospective study of 115 COVID-19 hospitalized patients with different degrees of severity to analyze the generation of autoimmune antibodies to common antigens: a lysate of erythrocytes, the lipid phosphatidylserine (PS) and DNA. High levels of IgG autoantibodies against erythrocyte lysates were observed in a large percentage (up to 36%) of patients. Anti-DNA and anti-PS antibodies determined upon hospital admission correlated strongly with later development of severe disease, showing a positive predictive value of 85.7% and 92.8%, respectively. Patients with positive values for at least one of the two autoantibodies accounted for 24% of total severe cases. Statistical analysis identified strong correlations between anti-DNA antibodies and markers of cell injury, coagulation, neutrophil levels and erythrocyte size. Anti-DNA and anti-PS autoantibodies may play an important role in the pathogenesis of COVID-19 and could be developed as predictive biomarkers for disease severity and specific clinical manifestations.
PMCID:8441539
PMID: 34504035
ISSN: 2575-1077
CID: 5061302

Ambulatory fetal heart rate monitoring (FHRM) to surveil pregnancies at risk for congenital heart block [Meeting Abstract]

Masson, M; Phoon, C; Sinkovskaya, E; Howley, L; Acherman, R; Makhoul, M; Pinto, N; Chang, M; Clancy, R; Drewes, B; Cuneo, B; Buyon, J
Background/Purpose: Congenital Heart Block (CHB) complicates 2% of anti-Ro/ SSA antibody positive pregnancies and carries substantial perinatal morbidity and mortality. Almost all survivors require lifelong pacing. Data suggests the potential of anti-inflammatory treatment of 1degree and 2degree CHB in preventing progression to immutable complete block. However, the optimal surveillance strategy to detect rapidly transitioning and potentially reversible conduction disease is unknown. This study addresses the feasibility, acceptance and accuracy of the fetal heart rate and rhythm technique (FHRM) in high risk mothers.
Method(s): Prospective data from the Surveillance To Prevent AV Block Likely to Occur Quickly (STOP BLOQ) study were leveraged. Mothers referred to the study all had commercially positive anti-Ro/ SSA antibodies and were stratified into high and low titers of anti-Ro60 and Ro52 based on a research ELISA which used a threshold cutoff defined as the titer above or below that obtained for 50 mothers with a previous CHB offspring. Mothers with anti-Ro60 or 52 antibodies at or above 1,000 I.U or with a previous CHB offspring, were trained to perform FHRM with an educational video and personal instruction from a pediatric cardiologist. From 17-25 weeks of gestation, FHRM was completed 3x/day in addition to weekly or biweekly fetal echocardiograms (echo). Mothers texted all FHRM sounds to the study's data coordinating center. For those FHRM deemed abnormal by the mothers, texts were immediately sent to an on call pediatric cardiologist who either reassured if FHRM was normal or referred for emergency fetal echo in < 6 hours if abnormal. Postnatal electrocardiograms were evaluated for CHB.
Result(s): Fifty-six mothers with commercial anti-Ro/ SSA positivity were consented to the study. Of these, 37 (inclusive of 6 with previous CHB) performed FRHM since they had high titer anti-Ro60 (n=8) or 52 antibodies (n=7) or both (n=21), albeit one mother had unexpectedly low titer antibodies to both Ro60 and 52 and a child with incomplete CHB 4 yrs prior to enrollment. In total 3,360 FHRM audiotexts were received during the monitoring period. Of these, 39 recordings from 5 concerned mothers prompted an immediate call with the cardiologist. All but 2 recordings were deemed to be normal based on review of the audiotext alone; the cardiologist requested that the patient send repeat recordings after review as part of re-training and to provide additional reassurance. In the 2 cases an emergency echo was completed in < 6 hrs. In both there were premature atrial contractions which confirmed the mother's perception of the FHRM abnormality. However, there was no evidence of conduction disease. All surveillance echoes were normal. Thus, the overall rate of false positive recordings for the concern of a conduction defect perceived by the mothers was 1.1% (38/3360). There were no cases of CHB at birth.
Conclusion(s): These data support that FHRM is feasible and accurate. Mothers can be empowered to detect rhythm abnormalities with very few false perceptions thus supporting this technique to substantially enhance the management of anti-Ro/ SSA pregnancies
PMCID:
EMBASE:637276346
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5164622

Putting the pieces on the board: Mapping SLE nephritis biopsies from the accelerating medicines project using high-density immunofluorescence imaging [Meeting Abstract]

Smuda, C; Eichinger, A; Clancy, R; Buyon, J; Reizis, B
Background/Purpose: The Accelerating Medicines Project (AMP) has enabled significant increases in understanding of SLE nephritis pathology, providing a profile of dozens of leukocyte subsets within affected kidneys by single-cell RNA sequencing of nephritis biopsies. While these results suggest a complex network of interactions between cell populations during nephritis, the spatial positioning of these cells is lost during the sequencing process. Inferred interactions between the diverse identified cell types would be greatly strengthened by detailed spatial information, placing these cells in context with each other and with the surrounding structures of the kidney.
Method(s): In consultation with AMP, we have used CODEX, a multicycle imaging technology allowing for staining of up to 40 targets on a single tissue sample without tissue degradation, to capture preliminary images of the AMP tissue biopsies available at New York University. Extensive antibody screening, sample preparation, optimization of antigen retrieval, and imaging steps are required, which remain under active optimization to allow for imaging the entirety of the AMP biopsy cohort available at the Grossman School of Medicine, which has been fully processed for future staining.
Result(s): At present we are able to image sixteen targets capturing dense interstitial T and B cell infiltrates, intratubular and interstitial myeloid populations, and sparser glomerular infiltrating cells in our demonstration cohort, with clear imaging of the glomeruli, tubules, and interstitial spaces. Further targets will be added as they are optimized, further allowing subsetting of T, B, and myeloid populations, with the goal of capturing the populations identified previously in single-cell sequencing.
Conclusion(s): CODEX imaging of renal biopsy samples provides spatial context for prior observations across a range of SLE nephritis samples, with complex interstitial populations found around glomeruli and tubules in active disease. Deeper profiling with expanded antigen targets to enable further sub-population phenotyping and activation states and imaging of the full cohort of biopsies available at NYU will provide a spatial atlas to SLE nephritis and further reveal underlying mechanisms of disease
PMCID:
EMBASE:637276142
ISSN: 2326-5205
CID: 5164632