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Immune cell quantification of in situ inflammation partitions human lupus nephritis into mechanistic subtypes
Gabriel Casella, Madeleine S. Torcasso, Junting Ai, Thao P. Cao, Satoshi Hara, Michael S. Andrade, Deepjyoti Ghosh, Daming Shao, Anthony Chang, Kichul Ko, Anita S. Chong, Maryellen L. Giger, Marcus R. Clark
Gabriel Casella, Madeleine S. Torcasso, Junting Ai, Thao P. Cao, Satoshi Hara, Michael S. Andrade, Deepjyoti Ghosh, Daming Shao, Anthony Chang, Kichul Ko, Anita S. Chong, Maryellen L. Giger, Marcus R. Clark
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Clinical Research and Public Health Autoimmunity Immunology

Immune cell quantification of in situ inflammation partitions human lupus nephritis into mechanistic subtypes

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Abstract

BACKGROUND In human lupus nephritis (LuN), tubulointerstitial inflammation (TII) is prognostically more important than glomerular inflammation. However, a comprehensive understanding of both TII complexity and heterogeneity is lacking.METHODS Herein, we used high-dimensional confocal microscopy, spatial transcriptomics, and specialized computer vision techniques to quantify immune cell populations and localize these within normal and diseased renal cortex structures. With these tools, we compared LuN to renal allograft rejection (RAR) and normal kidney tissues on 54 deidentified biopsies.RESULTS In both LuN and RAR, the 33 characterized immune cell populations formed discrete subgroups whose constituents covaried in prevalence across biopsies. In both diseases, these covariant immune cell subgroups organized into the same unique niches. Therefore, inflammation could be resolved into trajectories representing the relative prevalence and density of cardinal immune cell members of each covariant subgroup. Indeed, in any one biopsy, the inflammatory state could be characterized by quantifying constituent immune cell trajectories. Remarkably, LuN heterogeneity could be captured by quantifying a few myeloid immune cell trajectories, while RAR was more complex with additional T cell trajectories.CONCLUSIONS Our studies identify rules governing renal inflammation and thus provide an approach for resolving LuN into discrete mechanistic categories.FUNDING NIH (U19 AI 082724 [MRC], R01 AI148705 [MRC and ASC]), Chan Zuckerberg Biohub (MRC), and Lupus Research Alliance (MRC).

Authors

Gabriel Casella, Madeleine S. Torcasso, Junting Ai, Thao P. Cao, Satoshi Hara, Michael S. Andrade, Deepjyoti Ghosh, Daming Shao, Anthony Chang, Kichul Ko, Anita S. Chong, Maryellen L. Giger, Marcus R. Clark

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Figure 7

Immune cell trajectories correlate with tissue inflammation and damage.

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Immune cell trajectories correlate with tissue inflammation and damage.
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(A and B) CD8+ T cell density as a function of immune cell density (A) and score (B). (C and D) CD4+ T cell density as a function of immune cell density (C) and myxovirus resistance protein 1 (MXA) score (D). (E and F) MerTK+CD163– macrophage density as a function of immune cell density (E) and inflamed tubule density (F). (G) CD163+ macrophage density as a function of immune cell density. (H) CD163+ macrophage proportion as a function of Collagen III (COL III) score. (I and J) Inflammatory HLA class II+ monocytes immune cell density as a function of immune cell density (I) and MXA score (J).

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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