Immune cell organization in the lupus kidney
Using tools such as single cell RNAseq and spatial mapping, researchers can determine the presence and distribution of monocytes - and their possible roles - in human autoimmune disease.
Tuesday, March 26, 2019,
9AM PDT | 12PM EDT | 4PM GMT | 5PM CET
If you've already registered, please click here to log in to the webcast.A major challenge in developing treatments for lupus, an autoimmune disease that affects many organs in the human body, has been in identifying disease-specific cell types and their state and function. This webcast will describe how we profiled immune cells infiltrating the lupus kidneys. Using single-cell RNAseq (scRNAseq), we found 21 immune cell types in the lupus kidney that were mostly absent in healthy kidney. We focused on three monocytes, whose gene-expression signatures implied they represented a continuum of states. First, monocytes enter from the blood; in the tissue they differentiate to a phagocytic form, before finally turning into a reparative state. Importantly, these monocytes did not map to those in prior studies, suggesting disease and tissue specificity. Kidney is a complex but highly organized tissue. We hypothesized that the monocytes were changing state in response to environmental signals. Since spatial relationships are lost after tissue dissociation required for scRNA-seq, we instead used intact clinical specimens to map the monocytes’ relationships to histological features. We found that each monocyte state occupies a discrete renal compartment, suggesting that each compartment provides a unique set of disease- and tissue-specific signals for monocyte differentiation in the lupus kidney.
This webcast will feature:
- Functional insights into lupus-specific monocyte states in tissue.
- How we used RNAscope in situ technologies to stain state-specific monocyte cell types in tissue.
- How we related monocyte states to histological features of complex tissue.
- A live Q&A session.
This webcast has been produced for Advanced Cell Diagnostics by Nature Research Custom Media. The sponsor, Advanced Cell Diagnostics, retains sole responsibility for content. About this content


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