作者
Margo P. Emont,Christopher Jacobs,Adam L. Essene,Deepti Pant,Danielle Tenen,Georgia Colleluori,Angelica Di Vincenzo,Anja Moltke Jørgensen,Hesam Dashti,Adam Stefek,Elizabeth R. McGonagle,Sophie Strobel,Samantha Laber,Saaket Agrawal,Gregory P. Westcott,Amrita Kar,Molly Veregge,Anton Gulko,Harini Srinivasan,Zachary Kramer,Eleanna De Filippis,Erin Merkel,Jennifer Ducie,Christopher G. Boyd,William Gourash,Anita P. Courcoulas,Samuel J. Lin,Bernard T. Lee,Donald J. Morris,Adam M. Tobias,Amit V. Khera,Melina Claussnitzer,Tune H. Pers,Antonio Giordano,Orr Ashenberg,Aviv Regev,Linus Tsai,Evan D. Rosen
摘要
White adipose tissue, once regarded as morphologically and functionally bland, is now recognized to be dynamic, plastic and heterogenous, and is involved in a wide array of biological processes including energy homeostasis, glucose and lipid handling, blood pressure control and host defence1. High-fat feeding and other metabolic stressors cause marked changes in adipose morphology, physiology and cellular composition1, and alterations in adiposity are associated with insulin resistance, dyslipidemia and type 2 diabetes2. Here we provide detailed cellular atlases of human and mouse subcutaneous and visceral white fat at single-cell resolution across a range of body weight. We identify subpopulations of adipocytes, adipose stem and progenitor cells, vascular and immune cells and demonstrate commonalities and differences across species and dietary conditions. We link specific cell types to increased risk of metabolic disease and provide an initial blueprint for a comprehensive set of interactions between individual cell types in the adipose niche in leanness and obesity. These data comprise an extensive resource for the exploration of genes, traits and cell types in the function of white adipose tissue across species, depots and nutritional conditions. A single-cell atlas of white adipose tissue from mouse and human reveals diverse cell types and similarities and differences across species and dietary conditions.