Abstract: Background Hypertension may be associated with renal cellular injury. Cells in distress release extracellular vesicles ( EV s), and their numbers in urine may reflect renal injury. Cellular senescence, an irreversible growth arrest in response to a noxious milieu, is characterized by release of proinflammatory cytokines. We hypothesized that EV s released by senescent nephron cells can be identified in urine of patients with hypertension. Methods and Results We recruited patients with essential hypertension ( EH ) or renovascular hypertension and healthy volunteers (n=14 each). Renal oxygenation was assessed using magnetic resonance imaging and blood samples collected from both renal veins for cytokine‐level measurements. EV s isolated from urine samples were characterized by imaging flow cytometry based on specific markers, including p16 (senescence marker), calyxin (podocytes), urate transporter 1 (proximal tubules), uromodulin (ascending limb of Henle's loop), and prominin‐2 (distal tubules). Overall percentage of urinary p16+ EV s was elevated in EH and renovascular hypertension patients compared with healthy volunteers and correlated inversely with renal function and directly with renal vein cytokine levels. Urinary levels of p16 + /urate transporter 1 + were elevated in all hypertensive subjects compared with healthy volunteers, whereas p16 + /prominin‐2 + levels were elevated only in EH versus healthy volunteers and p16 + /uromodulin + in renovascular hypertension versus EH . Conclusions Levels of p16 + EV s are elevated in urine of hypertensive patients and may reflect increased proximal tubular cellular senescence. In EH , EV s originate also from distal tubules and in renovascular hypertension from Henle's loop. Hence, urinary EV s levels may be useful to identify intrarenal sites of cellular senescence.
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