A neurogenic signature involving monoamine Oxidase-A controls human thermogenic adipose tissue development

Author:

Solivan-Rivera Javier1ORCID,Yang Loureiro Zinger1ORCID,DeSouza Tiffany2,Desai Anand2,Pallat Sabine1,Yang Qin1,Rojas-Rodriguez Raziel2,Ziegler Rachel2,Skritakis Pantos2,Joyce Shannon2,Zhong Denise2,Nguyen Tammy34,Corvera Silvia24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School

2. Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School

3. Department of Surgery, University of Massachusetts Medical School

4. Diabetes Center of Excellence, University of Massachusetts Medical Center

Abstract

Mechanisms that control ‘beige/brite’ thermogenic adipose tissue development may be harnessed to improve human metabolic health. To define these mechanisms, we developed a species-hybrid model in which human mesenchymal progenitor cells were used to develop white or thermogenic/beige adipose tissue in mice. The hybrid adipose tissue developed distinctive features of human adipose tissue, such as larger adipocyte size, despite its neurovascular architecture being entirely of murine origin. Thermogenic adipose tissue recruited a denser, qualitatively distinct vascular network, differing in genes mapping to circadian rhythm pathways, and denser sympathetic innervation. The enhanced thermogenic neurovascular network was associated with human adipocyte expression of THBS4, TNC, NTRK3, and SPARCL1, which enhance neurogenesis, and decreased expression of MAOA and ACHE, which control neurotransmitter tone. Systemic inhibition of MAOA, which is present in human but absent in mouse adipocytes, induced browning of human but not mouse adipose tissue, revealing the physiological relevance of this pathway. Our results reveal species-specific cell type dependencies controlling the development of thermogenic adipose tissue and point to human adipocyte MAOA as a potential target for metabolic disease therapy.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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