| Literature DB >> 32539124 |
Alice E Pollard1,2, David Carling1,3.
Abstract
Metabolic inflexibility, defined as the inability to respond or adapt to metabolic demand, is now recognised as a driving factor behind many pathologies associated with obesity and the metabolic syndrome. Adipose tissue plays a pivotal role in the ability of an organism to sense, adapt to and counteract environmental changes. It provides a buffer in times of nutrient excess, a fuel reserve during starvation and the ability to resist cold-stress through non-shivering thermogenesis. Recent advances in single-cell RNA sequencing combined with lineage tracing, transcriptomic and proteomic analyses have identified novel adipocyte progenitors that give rise to specialised adipocytes with diverse functions, some of which have the potential to be exploited therapeutically. This review will highlight the common and distinct functions of well-known adipocyte populations with respect to their lineage and plasticity, as well as introducing the most recent members of the adipocyte family and their roles in whole organism energy homeostasis. Finally, this article will outline some of the more preliminary findings from large data sets generated by single-cell transcriptomics of mouse and human adipose tissue and their implications for the field, both for discovery and for therapy.Entities:
Keywords: adipocytes; brown adipose tissue; thermogenesis; white adipose tissue
Year: 2020 PMID: 32539124 PMCID: PMC7293110 DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20200298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857
Figure 1.Anatomical location of adipose tissue depots.
The locations of different depots of brown (BAT), subcutaneous and visceral white adipose tissue (WAT) in mice and humans is shown.
Figure 2.Thermogenic mechanisms in BAT and WAT.
Brown adipocyte architecture contributes to thermogenic phenotypes through vascularisation, innervation, multilocular lipid droplets (LD) and high mitochondrial (MT) density. Assembly of mitochondria-organelle networks facilitate substrate utilisation, including the formation of mitochondria-associated ER membrane tethers (MAM) by protein bridges [64,90–96]. (a) Canonical UCP1-mediated thermogenesis via uncoupling of the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC), resulting in H+ gradient disturbance and proton leak, dissipating energy as heat. UCP1 activity is stimulated by free fatty acid (FFA) and inhibited by purine nucleotides [65,67,69,97–105]. (b) SERCA/RyR mediated Ca2+ futile cycling in mitochondria. SERCA1 is found in the inner mitochondrial membranes (IMM) of BAT [64,106]. Ca2+ enters the mitochondria via mitochondrial Ca2+ transporters and is pumped into the inner mitochondrial space (IMS) by SERCA1, with concomitant ATP hydrolysis. Ca2+ returns to the matrix via RyR. These cycles are abundant in the ER of brown adipose, heater organs (fish) and skeletal muscle [64,106–113]. A leaky mitochondrial RyR drives increased ATP hydrolysis uncoupled from net Ca2+ transport generating heat. This may also be subject to an unknown uncoupling agent [114]. (c) Non-canonical thermogenesis through creatine futile cycling. ATP generated by the ETC is shuttled into the IMS by the ATP transporter AAC in return for ADP. ATP is then hydrolysed by mitochondrial creatine kinase (mi-CK) to drive creatine phosphorylation to PCr. The reversal, driven by an as yet unidentified enzyme completes the futile cycle [115–118]. (d) Non-canonical thermogenesis by SERCA2b-driven Ca2+ futile cycling on the ER [114,119–121]. See text for more details.
Summary of adipocyte populations, location(s), specialised/stimulating factors and key regulators of cellular fate
| Adipocyte (specialised) | Known Lineage Markers | Specialisation | Key regulators | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White (classical) | PDGFRα+; PDGFRβ+/−; MYF5+/− (depot-specific); SCA1+; MYH11+; CD34+; CD29+; CD24+; CD31−; LIN− | Adipokine production, lipid storage, endocrine, insulation | PPARγ, C/EBPα/β/δ, RXR, CtBP1/2, PRDM16, ZFP423 | [ |
| Dermal (dWAT) | Camp; Ccl4, classic WAT (see above) | Hair cycling, skin wound healing, immune response | CAMP | [ |
| Beige/brite | PDGFRα+/−; PDGFRβ+/−; SCA1+; MYH11+;CD34+; CD29+; CD24+; CD31−; LIN− | Thermogenesis (UCP1), glucose uptake, mitochondrial respiration, creatine futile cycling | PPARγ, PRDM16 EHMT1, PGC1α, C/EBPα/β/δ, ZFP516, ZFP423 EBF2, BMP7 | [ |
| Alt. Beige (iWAT) | PRDM16++; UCP1−/−; PDGFRα+; SCA1+; MYH11+;CD34+; CD29+; CD24+; CD31−; LIN− | Thermogenesis (Ca2+ futile cycling SERCA2b/RyR2), glucose uptake | PRDM16, PPARγ, EHMT1, PGC1α, C/EBPα/β/δ, ZFP516, EBF2, BMP7 | [ |
| g-beige (iWAT) | PDGFRα+ SMA+; PAX3+; CD34+; CD29+ MYOD1Lin+ | Glucose metabolism, glycolysis (ENO1), UCP1 | GABPα | [ |
| Pink (mammary) | AP2+; WAP+; ELF5; epithelial | Milk production | Pregnancy (unknown) | [ |
| SMART (iWAT) | MYF5/6+; PAX7+ | Thermogenesis (Ca2+ futile cycling SERCA1/RyR1/3), glucose metabolism, mitochondrial activity | AMPK activity | [ |
| BAT | MYF5+; EN1+; Pax7+ | Lipid storage, Thermogenesis (UCP1 and Ca2+ futile cycling Serca1), glucose metabolism | PRDM16/3, PPARγ, EHMT1, PGC1α, C/EBPα/β/δ, ZFP516, EBF2, BMP7, KLF11/15, TLE3 | [ |
Figure 3.The heterogeneity and plasticity of adipocyte lineages.
Key metabolic and thermogenic pathways operating in each cell type are shown together with predominant proteins involved in these pathways. Refer to the text for further details.
Figure 4.Contribution of known stem cell niches to mature adipocyte development.
Adipose-stem cell (ASC) populations identified by single-cell RNA sequencing are shown with respect to proposed nomenclature and existing hierarchies [168,251,258,261–265]. ASC1, known formerly as Adipose Progenitor Cells (APCs) and committed pre-adipocytes, have been identified in all single-cell RNA sequencing studies reported, and give rise to mature adipocytes in vivo. They are further classified as ASC1a and ASC1b, with respect to their progenitor population. ASC1a, also known as APC and ICAM1/PREF-1 expressing pre-adipocytes are prevalent in most differentiated tissue, irrespective of depot. They encompass both PDGFRβ+ mural cells and PDGFRα+/PDGFRβ− precursors, commonly associated with classical adipogenesis and are SCA1+. ASC1b, previously identified as CD142+/AREG adipocyte precursors are a distinct population, arising from a second master progenitor, ASC2. ASC2/DPP4+/FIP+ cells are of stromal origin, residing in the reticular interstitium (RI) of iWAT and mesothelium of eWAT). ASC2 cells give rise to both ASC1a and 1b populations, with TGFβ a potent lineage determinant between these cell fates. Immune cell populations contribute to the differentiation of ASC populations, with CD9+ macrophages expressing SPP1 and TREM2 found in crown-like structures surrounding mature adipocytes [251,265]. Functional differences identified between these populations suggest that all are adipogenic, with stimulus-specific recruitment under inflammatory and adrenergic stimuli.