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Single-cell analysis of senescent epithelia reveals targetable mechanisms promoting fibrosis
Eoin D. O’Sullivan, … , Hassan Dihazi, David A. Ferenbach
Eoin D. O’Sullivan, … , Hassan Dihazi, David A. Ferenbach
Published November 22, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(22):e154124. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.154124.
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Research Article Cell biology Nephrology

Single-cell analysis of senescent epithelia reveals targetable mechanisms promoting fibrosis

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Abstract

Progressive fibrosis and maladaptive organ repair result in significant morbidity and millions of premature deaths annually. Senescent cells accumulate with aging and after injury and are implicated in organ fibrosis, but the mechanisms by which senescence influences repair are poorly understood. Using 2 murine models of injury and repair, we show that obstructive injury generated senescent epithelia, which persisted after resolution of the original injury, promoted ongoing fibrosis, and impeded adaptive repair. Depletion of senescent cells with ABT-263 reduced fibrosis in reversed ureteric obstruction and after renal ischemia/reperfusion injury. We validated these findings in humans, showing that senescence and fibrosis persisted after relieved renal obstruction. We next characterized senescent epithelia in murine renal injury using single-cell RNA-Seq. We extended our classification to human kidney and liver disease and identified conserved profibrotic proteins, which we validated in vitro and in human disease. We demonstrated that increased levels of protein disulfide isomerase family A member 3 (PDIA3) augmented TGF-β–mediated fibroblast activation. Inhibition of PDIA3 in vivo significantly reduced kidney fibrosis during ongoing renal injury and as such represented a new potential therapeutic pathway. Analysis of the signaling pathways of senescent epithelia connected senescence to organ fibrosis, permitting rational design of antifibrotic therapies.

Authors

Eoin D. O’Sullivan, Katie J. Mylonas, Rachel Bell, Cyril Carvalho, David P. Baird, Carolynn Cairns, Kevin M. Gallagher, Ross Campbell, Marie Docherty, Alexander Laird, Neil C. Henderson, Tamir Chandra, Kristina Kirschner, Bryan Conway, Gry H. Dihazi, Michael Zeisberg, Jeremy Hughes, Laura Denby, Hassan Dihazi, David A. Ferenbach

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Figure 4

ABT-263 alters the renal transcriptome by depleting senescent cells after R-UUO.

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ABT-263 alters the renal transcriptome by depleting senescent cells afte...
(A) Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between ABT-263–treated animals and vehicle-treated controls at 35 days after reversal. All FDR values for all pathways shown are <0.05. GSEA performed on WebGestalt. (B) Heatmap showing senescence-associated and fibrosis-associated genes are persistent during repair, which return toward baseline following administration of ABT-263. The color scheme is based on z score distribution. All genes during late repair are significant DEGs (q < 0.1) as compared with uninjured group. ABT-263–treated genes compared with vehicle-treated were all were significant DEGs (q < 0.1) except H3c1, H2ax, Hmgb1, Il6, and Il10.

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