Spatially Distinct Macrophage Subsets Drive Myofibroblast Heterogeneity and Maladaptive Fibrosis in Lupus Nephritis

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Spatially Distinct Macrophage Subsets Drive Myofibroblast Heterogeneity and Maladaptive Fibrosis in Lupus Nephritis

Authors

Raparia, C.; Hoover, P.; Ai, J.; Clark, M.; Shah, S.; Accelerating Medicines Partnership (AMP) RA/SLE Network, ; diamond, b.; Hacohen, N.; Arazi, A.; Davidson, A. N.

Abstract

Objectives: Lupus nephritis (LN) is a severe complication of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), leading to progressive renal fibrosis and functional decline. Understanding the interplay between immune cells and stromal cells is needed to develop effective therapeutic strategies. Here, we investigated the landscape of macrophage-fibroblast interactions in human LN and validated these findings in mouse models. Methods: We characterized distinct fibroblast subsets and their interactions with renal macrophages using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) of 156 human LN biopsies and 30 healthy controls from the AMP-SLE cohort, and spatial transcriptomics of biopsies from 6 LN patients. In vitro co-culture studies using mouse models were performed to further define functional consequences of these interactions. Results: We identified two myofibroblast subsets: a pro-inflammatory subset (Myofib1) enriched in the tubulointerstitium, and a fibrotic/remodeling subset (Myofib2) in glomeruli, both correlating with the histologic chronicity index. Spatial transcriptomics revealed different colocalization patterns, with Myofib1 interacting with activated resident macrophage (RM) subsets and Myofib2 with glomerular infiltrating disease-associated macrophages. In vitro co-culture studies demonstrated that nephritic RMs promote a pro-inflammatory, remodeling fibroblast phenotype that impairs wound healing and drives a Myofib1-like gene program, whereas disease-associated macrophages generated profibrotic fibroblasts with dysregulated reparative capacity. Cell-cell communication analyses identified key ligand-receptor interactions mediating this crosstalk, including Spp1/integrins, Sema4/PlexinB, and NAMPT/INSR. Conclusions: Our data reveal a spatially and functionally heterogeneous landscape of macrophage-fibroblast crosstalk in LN. These findings advance our understanding of renal fibrogenesis in LN, highlighting specific fibro-inflammatory circuits that may represent therapeutic targets to prevent chronic renal damage.

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