Author:
Lazarescu Or,Ziv-Agam Maya,Haim Yulia,Hekselman Idan,Jubran Juman,Shneyour Ariel,Kitsberg Danny,Levin Liron,Liberty Idit F,Yoel Uri,Dukhno Oleg,Adam Miriam,Körner Antje,Murphy Rinki,Blüher Matthias,Habib Naomi,Rudich Assaf,Yeger-Lotem Esti
Abstract
ABSTRACTHuman adipose depots are functionally distinct. Yet, recent single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) analyses largely uncovered overlapping/similar cell-type landscapes. We hypothesized that adipocytes subtypes, differentiation trajectories, and/or intercellular communication patterns could illuminate this depot similarity-difference gap. For this, we performed snRNA-seq of human subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue. Whereas the majority of adipocytes in both depots were ‘classical’, namely enriched in lipid metabolism pathways, we also observed ‘specialized’ adipocyte subtypes that were enriched in immune-related, extracellular matrix deposition (fibrosis), vascularization/angiogenesis, or ribosomal processes. Pseudo-temporal analysis suggested a developmental trajectory from adipose progenitor cells to classical adipocytes via specialized adipocytes, suggesting that the classical state stems from loss, rather than gain, of specialized functions. Lastly, intercellular communication routes were consistent with the different inflammatory tone of the two depots. Jointly, these findings provide a high-resolution view into the contribution of cellular composition, differentiation, and intercellular communication patterns to human fat depot differences.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory