Single-cell sequencing of human white adipose tissue identifies new cell states in health and obesity

White adipose tissue (WAT) is an essential regulator of energy storage and systemic metabolic homeostasis. Regulatory networks consisting of immune and structural cells are necessary to maintain WAT metabolism, which can become impaired during obesity in mammals. Using single-cell transcriptomics an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature immunology 2021-05, Vol.22 (5), p.639-653
Hauptverfasser: Hildreth, Andrew D., Ma, Feiyang, Wong, Yung Yu, Sun, Ryan, Pellegrini, Matteo, O’Sullivan, Timothy E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:White adipose tissue (WAT) is an essential regulator of energy storage and systemic metabolic homeostasis. Regulatory networks consisting of immune and structural cells are necessary to maintain WAT metabolism, which can become impaired during obesity in mammals. Using single-cell transcriptomics and flow cytometry, we unveil a large-scale comprehensive cellular census of the stromal vascular fraction of healthy lean and obese human WAT. We report new subsets and developmental trajectories of adipose-resident innate lymphoid cells, dendritic cells and monocyte-derived macrophage populations that accumulate in obese WAT. Analysis of cell–cell ligand–receptor interactions and obesity-enriched signaling pathways revealed a switch from immunoregulatory mechanisms in lean WAT to inflammatory networks in obese WAT. These results provide a detailed and unbiased cellular landscape of homeostatic and inflammatory circuits in healthy human WAT. Immune cells exert important effects on white adipose tissue (WAT) in metabolic diseases. O’Sullivan and colleagues generate a comprehensive single-cell atlas of WAT cells in both health and disease to identify new cellular networks and differentiation trajectories.
ISSN:1529-2908
1529-2916
DOI:10.1038/s41590-021-00922-4