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Distinct pathogenic roles for resident and monocyte-derived macrophages in lupus nephritis
Nathan Richoz, Zewen K. Tuong, Kevin W. Loudon, Eduardo Patiño-Martínez, John R. Ferdinand, Jorge Romo-Tena, Anaïs Portet, Kathleen R. Bashant, Emeline Thevenon, Francesca Rucci, Thomas Hoyler, Tobias Junt, Mariana J. Kaplan, Richard M. Siegel, Menna R. Clatworthy
Nathan Richoz, Zewen K. Tuong, Kevin W. Loudon, Eduardo Patiño-Martínez, John R. Ferdinand, Jorge Romo-Tena, Anaïs Portet, Kathleen R. Bashant, Emeline Thevenon, Francesca Rucci, Thomas Hoyler, Tobias Junt, Mariana J. Kaplan, Richard M. Siegel, Menna R. Clatworthy
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Research Article Immunology

Distinct pathogenic roles for resident and monocyte-derived macrophages in lupus nephritis

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Abstract

Lupus nephritis is a serious complication of systemic lupus erythematosus, mediated by IgG immune complex (IC) deposition in kidneys, with limited treatment options. Kidney macrophages are critical tissue sentinels that express IgG-binding Fcγ receptors (FcγRs), with previous studies identifying prenatally seeded resident macrophages as major IC responders. Using single-cell transcriptomic and spatial analyses in murine and human lupus nephritis, we sought to understand macrophage heterogeneity and subset-specific contributions in disease. In lupus nephritis, the cell fate trajectories of tissue-resident (TrMac) and monocyte-derived (MoMac) kidney macrophages were perturbed, with disease-associated transcriptional states indicating distinct pathogenic roles for TrMac and MoMac subsets. Lupus nephritis–associated MoMac subsets showed marked induction of FcγR response genes, avidly internalized circulating ICs, and presented IC-opsonized antigen. In contrast, lupus nephritis–associated TrMac subsets demonstrated limited IC uptake, but expressed monocyte chemoattractants, and their depletion attenuated monocyte recruitment to the kidney. TrMacs also produced B cell tissue niche factors, suggesting a role in supporting autoantibody-producing lymphoid aggregates. Extensive similarities were observed with human kidney macrophages, revealing cross-species transcriptional disruption in lupus nephritis. Overall, our study suggests a division of labor in the kidney macrophage response in lupus nephritis, with treatment implications — TrMacs orchestrate leukocyte recruitment while MoMacs take up and present IC antigen.

Authors

Nathan Richoz, Zewen K. Tuong, Kevin W. Loudon, Eduardo Patiño-Martínez, John R. Ferdinand, Jorge Romo-Tena, Anaïs Portet, Kathleen R. Bashant, Emeline Thevenon, Francesca Rucci, Thomas Hoyler, Tobias Junt, Mariana J. Kaplan, Richard M. Siegel, Menna R. Clatworthy

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Figure 5

TrMacs orchestrate monocyte recruitment in lupus nephritis.

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TrMacs orchestrate monocyte recruitment in lupus nephritis.
(A) CellPhon...
(A) CellPhoneDB receptor-ligand interaction analysis between group 1 (group 1.4 and group 1.5) and group 2 (group 2.1, group 2.2, and group 2.3) clusters split by mouse strain (M = MRL-MpJ; L = MRL-Lpr). Significant interactions (P < 0.05) are highlighted in red. (B) Spatial expression of CCL8 and CCR5 in Visium Spatial Gene Expression data of MRL-MpJ (left) and MRL-Lpr (right) kidney sections. (Left and middle) Expression of molecules per spot colored from increasing gradient from white to red, corresponding to increasing expression value. (Right) Positive correlation values of expression of molecules with Group 1.5 prediction scores across k-nearest neighborhoods of spots are colored from white to red. Gray spots indicate no available scores or negative correlation. (C) Positive correlation values of expression of molecules (CCL8 and CCR2, left; CCL4 and CCR5, middle; CD72 and SEMA4D, right) in Visium Spatial Gene Expression data of MRL-MpJ (left) and MRL-Lpr (right) kidney sections. Positive correlation values of expression of molecules are colored from white to red. Gray spots indicate no available scores or negative correlation. (D) Representative confocal microscopy (n = 3) showing SEMA4D expression (yellow) in healthy tissue (left) and a large immune infiltrate (right) in the cortex (left, CD11b — red) in the kidneys from 18-week-old MRL-Lpr mice. Colocalization of CD11b with SEMA4D shown in white. Scale bar = 25 μm.

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