Selective remodelling of the adipose niche in obesity and weight loss
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Peer-reviewed
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Abstract
Weight loss significantly improves metabolic and cardiovascular health in people with obesity1-3. The remodelling of adipose tissue (AT) is central to these varied and important clinical effects4. However, surprisingly little is known about the underlying mechanisms, presenting a barrier to treatment advances. Here we report a spatially resolved single-nucleus atlas (comprising 171,247 cells from 70 people) investigating the cell types, molecular events and regulatory factors that reshape human AT, and thus metabolic health, in obesity and therapeutic weight loss. We discover selective vulnerability to senescence in metabolic, precursor and vascular cells and reveal that senescence is potently reversed by weight loss. We define gene regulatory mechanisms and tissue signals that may drive a degenerative cycle of senescence, tissue injury and metabolic dysfunction. We find that weight loss reduces adipocyte hypertrophy and biomechanical constraint pathways, activating global metabolic flux and bioenergetic substrate cycles that may mediate systemic improvements in metabolic health. In the immune compartment, we demonstrate that weight loss represses obesity-induced macrophage infiltration but does not completely reverse activation, leaving these cells primed to trigger potential weight regain and worsen metabolic dysfunction. Throughout, we map cells to tissue niches to understand the collective determinants of tissue injury and recovery. Overall, our complementary single-nucleus and spatial datasets offer unprecedented insights into the basis of obese AT dysfunction and its reversal by weight loss and are a key resource for mechanistic and therapeutic exploration.
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Acknowledgements: This work was funded by the Medical Research Council UK (MR/K002414/1, MC_UP_1605/7; to W.R.S.), the Wellcome Trust (219602/Z/19/Z; to W.R.S.), the National Institute for Health Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre (BRC, CL-2018-21-501; to W.R.S.) and Diabetes UK (22/0006436; to W.R.S., T.T. and M.N.). The MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences flow cytometry, genomics, bioinformatics and computing, and microscopy facilities provided support for the single-nucleus isolation and clean-up, single-nucleus and spatial library preparation, sequencing demultiplexing, alignment and feature counting, and high-resolution immune histochemistry and immune fluorescence microscopy. We thank J. Gil for insights into senescence pathobiology and detection.
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1476-4687

