[PDF][PDF] A multi-layered quantitative in vivo expression atlas of the podocyte unravels kidney disease candidate genes

MM Rinschen, M Gödel, F Grahammer, S Zschiedrich… - Cell reports, 2018 - cell.com
MM Rinschen, M Gödel, F Grahammer, S Zschiedrich, M Helmstädter, O Kretz, M Zarei…
Cell reports, 2018cell.com
Damage to and loss of glomerular podocytes has been identified as the culprit lesion in
progressive kidney diseases. Here, we combine mass spectrometry-based proteomics with
mRNA sequencing, bioinformatics, and hypothesis-driven studies to provide a
comprehensive and quantitative map of mammalian podocytes that identifies unanticipated
signaling pathways. Comparison of the in vivo datasets with proteomics data from podocyte
cell cultures showed a limited value of available cell culture models. Moreover, in vivo stable …
Summary
Damage to and loss of glomerular podocytes has been identified as the culprit lesion in progressive kidney diseases. Here, we combine mass spectrometry-based proteomics with mRNA sequencing, bioinformatics, and hypothesis-driven studies to provide a comprehensive and quantitative map of mammalian podocytes that identifies unanticipated signaling pathways. Comparison of the in vivo datasets with proteomics data from podocyte cell cultures showed a limited value of available cell culture models. Moreover, in vivo stable isotope labeling by amino acids uncovered surprisingly rapid synthesis of mitochondrial proteins under steady-state conditions that was perturbed under autophagy-deficient, disease-susceptible conditions. Integration of acquired omics dimensions suggested FARP1 as a candidate essential for podocyte function, which could be substantiated by genetic analysis in humans and knockdown experiments in zebrafish. This work exemplifies how the integration of multi-omics datasets can identify a framework of cell-type-specific features relevant for organ health and disease.
cell.com