Longitudinal Multi-Organ Transcriptomic Atlas of Salt-Induced Hypertension

root 提交于 周一, 09/01/2025 - 00:00
BACKGROUND: Salt-sensitive hypertension is a prevalent and clinically significant subtype of hypertension, where increased dietary salt intake elevates blood pressure and causes injury to multiple organ systems. Despite extensive research, dynamic molecular changes and conserved versus organ-specific transcriptional programs in hypertensive multi-organ damage remain poorly understood. Defining complex molecular pathways both in a temporal sequence and in an organ-specific manner is essential for developing targeted, precision therapies to mitigate hypertensive disease burden. METHODS: We generated a longitudinal multi-organ transcriptomic atlas of salt-sensitive hypertension using RNA sequencing of kidney cortex, kidney medulla, heart, and liver from Dahl salt-sensitive rats across four disease stages. A comprehensive bioinformatic analysis mapped dynamic transcriptional programs, evaluated 50 biological pathways, and defined upstream regulators. Histological and biochemical assays complemented transcriptomic analysis, while integration with human genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and compound transcriptome analysis provided translational insights and identified candidate therapeutics. RESULTS: Salt-induced hypertension elicited both shared and tissue-specific transcriptional programs that evolved with disease progression. The kidney medulla showed robust early immune activation with metabolic suppression, while the cortex exhibited transient metabolic activation before declining and initiating immune activation. The liver and heart showed time-dependent metabolic and inflammatory remodeling. Cross-organ comparisons revealed a shared early proliferative response that converged on proinflammatory and fibrotic signatures. Upstream regulator analysis identified 79 time- and tissue-specific transcription factors associated with gene expression dynamics. GWAS integration analysis revealed endocrine signaling, ion transport, lipid metabolism, and detoxification as conserved pathways across species, underscoring the translational relevance of the model and study. Predictive compound transcriptome analyses identified kinase inhibitors targeting phosphoinositide 3-kinase, mechanistic target of rapamycin and cyclin-dependent kinases as top candidates to counteract maladaptive transcriptional programs. CONCLUSIONS: This study defines temporal and tissue-specific transcriptomic remodeling in salt-sensitive hypertension and highlights the need for precision interventions to prevent progressive organ damage.