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A lipid-associated macrophage lineage rewires the spatial landscape of adipose tissue in early obesity
Cooper M. Stansbury, Gabrielle A. Dotson, Harrison Pugh, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Indika Rajapakse, Lindsey A. Muir
Cooper M. Stansbury, Gabrielle A. Dotson, Harrison Pugh, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Indika Rajapakse, Lindsey A. Muir
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Resource and Technical Advance Metabolism

A lipid-associated macrophage lineage rewires the spatial landscape of adipose tissue in early obesity

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Abstract

Adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) infiltration is associated with adipose tissue dysfunction and insulin resistance in mice and humans. Recent single-cell data highlight increased ATM heterogeneity in obesity but do not provide a spatial context for ATM phenotype dynamics. We integrated single-cell RNA-Seq, spatial transcriptomics, and imaging of murine adipose tissue in a time course study of diet-induced obesity. Overall, proinflammatory immune cells were predominant in early obesity, whereas nonresident antiinflammatory ATMs predominated in chronic obesity. A subset of these antiinflammatory ATMs were transcriptomically intermediate between monocytes and mature lipid-associated macrophages (LAMs) and were consistent with a LAM precursor (pre-LAM). Pre-LAMs were spatially associated with early obesity crown-like structures (CLSs), which indicate adipose tissue dysfunction. Spatial data showed colocalization of ligand-receptor transcripts related to lipid signaling among monocytes, pre-LAMs, and LAMs, including Apoe, Lrp1, Lpl, and App. Pre-LAM expression of these ligands in early obesity suggested signaling to LAMs in the CLS microenvironment. Our results refine understanding of ATM diversity and provide insight into the dynamics of the LAM lineage during development of metabolic disease.

Authors

Cooper M. Stansbury, Gabrielle A. Dotson, Harrison Pugh, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Indika Rajapakse, Lindsey A. Muir

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Figure 1

Diet-induced obesity and adipose tissue remodeling.

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Diet-induced obesity and adipose tissue remodeling.
(A) Time course for ...
(A) Time course for mice fed a 60% HFD for 8 weeks (8w) or 14 weeks (14w) versus ND controls. (B) Total BW by week on HFD. (C) Final BW at time of tissue collection. (D) eWAT weight (top) and eWAT as a percentage of BW (bottom). (E) Glucose measurements in cohorts 1 week prior to endpoint tissue collection. (F) GTT data showing AUC. (G) H&E-stained adipose tissue sections of eWAT from cohorts. (H) Frequency distribution and average adipocyte size in eWAT from cohorts. (B–E) For each group, n = 4. (F) For HFD-fed mice, n = 4–8 mice per group; for ND, n = 15 mice.

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