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1.
STAR Protoc ; 2(3): 100612, 2021 09 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34189477

ABSTRACT

Lipid-filled adipocytes are incompatible with droplet-based single-cell methods, such as 10x Genomics-based technology, thus restricting droplet-based single-cell analyses of adipose tissues to the stromal vascular fraction. To overcome this limitation and obtain cellular and molecular insight into adipose tissue composition and plasticity, single-nucleus sequencing-based technologies can be applied. Here, we provide an optimized protocol for nuclei isolation from mouse adipose tissues suitable for single-nucleus RNA sequencing. This allows for transcriptomic profiling of the entire adipose tissue at single-cell resolution. For complete details on the use of this protocol, please refer to Sárvári et al., 2021.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue, White/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Genomics , Animals , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Single-Cell Analysis/methods
2.
Cell Metab ; 33(2): 437-453.e5, 2021 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33378646

ABSTRACT

Adipose tissues display a remarkable ability to adapt to the dietary status. Here, we have applied single-nucleus RNA-seq to map the plasticity of mouse epididymal white adipose tissue at single-nucleus resolution in response to high-fat-diet-induced obesity. The single-nucleus approach allowed us to recover all major cell types and to reveal distinct transcriptional stages along the entire adipogenic trajectory from preadipocyte commitment to mature adipocytes. We demonstrate the existence of different adipocyte subpopulations and show that obesity leads to disappearance of the lipogenic subpopulation and increased abundance of the stressed lipid-scavenging subpopulation. Moreover, obesity is associated with major changes in the abundance and gene expression of other cell populations, including a dramatic increase in lipid-handling genes in macrophages at the expense of macrophage-specific genes. The data provide a powerful resource for future hypothesis-driven investigations of the mechanisms of adipocyte differentiation and adipose tissue plasticity.


Subject(s)
Adipose Tissue/metabolism , Obesity/metabolism , Adipogenesis/genetics , Animals , Cell Plasticity , Diet, High-Fat , Mice , Obesity/chemically induced , Obesity/genetics , Sequence Analysis, RNA
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