Abstract
Perirenal adipose tissue (PRAT) is a unique visceral depot that contains a mixture of brown and white adipocytes. The origin and plasticity of such cellular heterogeneity remains unknown. Here, we combine single-nucleus RNA sequencing with genetic lineage tracing to reveal the existence of a distinct subpopulation of Ucp1-/Cidea+ adipocytes that arises from brown-to-white conversion during postnatal life in the peri-ureter region of mouse PRAT. Cold exposure restores Ucp1 expression and a thermogenic phenotype in this subpopulation. These cells have a transcriptome that is distinct from subcutaneous beige adipocytes and may represent a unique type of cold-recruitable adipocytes. These results pave the way for studies of PRAT physiology and mechanisms controlling the plasticity of brown/white adipocyte phenotypes.
Introduction
Adipose tissue is composed of adipocytes and a stromal vascular fraction (SVF) that contains highly heterogeneous populations of adipose stem and progenitor cells (ASPCs), vascular endothelial cells, immune cells and small populations of other cell types (Rodeheffer et al., 2008; Trim and Lynch, 2022; Wang et al., 2020). Based on morphological and functional differences, adipocytes have been classified into three types, i.e., white, brown and beige adipocytes. Being the most abundant type of adipocyte, white adipocytes (WAs) contain a single large lipid droplet that occupies most of their intracellular space. They are present in visceral and subcutaneous depots and their primary function is to store excess energy in the form of triglycerides. WAs also secrete a number of hormones, including leptin, adiponectin and several others, that regulate the function of other cells in adipose tissue as well as other organs (Scheja and Heeren, 2019). In contrast, brown adipocytes (BAs) contain numerous small lipid droplets and a high density of mitochondria. Their primary function is the generation of heat, i.e. thermogenesis, through uncoupling of the mitochondrial electron transport chain from ATP production to produce heat. This is mediated by uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), a BA-specific protein located at the inner mitochondrial membrane (Cohen and Kajimura, 2021). Beige adipocytes (BeAs) are residents of subcutaneous white adipose tissue (WAT) depots that possess inducible thermogenic capacity, despite very low basal levels of UCP1 expression (Petrovic et al., 2010; Wu et al., 2012). Thanks to recent advances in single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), transcriptomic profiling of adipocytes at single-cell resolution has become feasible. snRNA-seq analysis of mouse and human WAT depots has revealed adipocyte subpopulations that are related to lipogenesis, lipid-scavenging and stress responses (Emont et al., 2022; Sarvari et al., 2021). Profiling of adipocytes from interscapular brown adipose tissue (iBAT) of mouse and human has identified a subpopulation that negatively regulates thermogenesis via paracrine secretion of acetate (Sun et al., 2020).
Visceral depots such as epidydimal, mesenteric and retroperitoneal adipose tissues are mainly made of WAs; whereas BAs and BeAs are often found in subcutaneous depots, such as iBAT and inguinal WAT (iWAT). Perirenal adipose tissue (PRAT) is bilaterally distributed around the kidney and is encapsulated by a multilayered fibrous membrane, known as the renal fascia (de Jong et al., 2015; Liu et al., 2019). The medial region of PRAT (herein termed mPRAT) is located around the hilum of the kidney, and several studies have identified UCP1-expressing BAs in this area in human PRAT, suggesting it represents a form of visceral BAT (Betz et al., 2013; Li et al., 2015; Nagano et al., 2015; Svensson et al., 2014; van den Beukel et al., 2015; Vergnes et al., 2016). In contrast, the lateral region of PRAT (herein termed lPRAT) is predominantly composed of WAs (de Jong et al., 2015). Based on morphological changes in adipocytes of human PRAT during aging, a process of continuous replacement of BAs by WAs has been proposed (Tanuma et al., 1976; Tanuma et al., 1975). On the other hand, analysis of PRAT collected at necropsy from people living in Siberia revealed an up to 40% BA component, indicating the potential of PRAT to respond to low environmental temperature (Efremova et al., 2020). Moreover, so-called “dormant” BAs have been described in PRAT of adult kidney donors, characterized by unilocular morphology, high levels of UCP1 expression and a gene expression profile that partially overlaps that of WAs (Jespersen et al., 2019).
The process by which BAs acquire WA-like properties has been referred to as “whitening”, and it is characterized by the enlargement of lipid droplets and reduced expression of thermogenic genes, such as Ucp1 (Shimizu et al., 2014). Brown-to-white conversion or whitening is a known complication of obesity associated with vascular rarefaction, tissue inflammation and leptin receptor deficiency (Kotzbeck et al., 2018; Rangel-Azevedo et al., 2022; Shimizu et al., 2014). In addition, warm adaptation, impaired β-adrenergic signaling and loss of adipose triglyceride lipase have also been implicated in BAT whitening (Kotzbeck et al., 2018). Under normal physiological conditions, whitening of BAT has only been demonstrated in rabbit iBAT (Huang et al., 2022). With regards to PRAT, it is unclear whether the process by which the number of WAs increase at the expense of BAs during postnatal life reflects direct brown-to-white cell conversion or some other mechanisms of replacement. Moreover, the cellular and molecular properties of the newly formed WA population as well as its spatial distribution in PRAT remain unknown.
In the present study, we took advantage of snRNA-seq and genetic lineage tracing methods to reveal the existence of a bona fide whitening process of BAs in the mPRAT during mouse postnatal development. We identified a distinct population of newly formed adipocytes derived by whitening, described its anatomical location, and characterized its molecular properties both during its formation and after cold exposure. In addition, our analysis of cells in the lPRAT, revealed populations of adipocytes, ASPCs and macrophages that are transcriptionally distinct from those found in classical visceral fat depots such as epididymal WAT (eWAT).
Results
snRNA-seq analysis of murine mPRAT reveals a unique adipocyte subpopulation and uncovers evidence of a brown-to-white transition during postnatal development
To explore the cellular dynamics of mPRAT and iBAT during postnatal development, we collected the tissues from 1-, 2- and 6-month-old C57BL/6J male mice for whole tissue snRNA-seq and performed depot-specific analysis. As expected, weight of the collected tissues gradually increased as the animals grew up (Figure S1A). After strict quality control (Figure S1B-C), we profiled a total of 11,708 and 31,079 nuclei for mPRAT and iBAT, respectively. In the integrated datasets of mPRAT, we identified 6 clusters based on differentially expressed genes (DEGs), including adipocyte, ASPC, macrophage, vascular (endothelial cell and pericyte) and mesothelial cells that are commonly present in adipose tissue (Massier et al., 2023) (Figure 1A-B and S1D-E). mPRAT was mostly composed of adipocytes and the relative proportions of all the cell types remained largely unchanged during the analyzed time points (Figure 1C). Similar cell types and cellular composition were identified in the integrated datasets of iBAT, with the exception of the presence of smooth muscle cells and absence of mesothelial cells (Figure 1D-F and S1F-G).
Next, we scrutinized mPRAT adipocyte population in greater detail through further clustering. Adipocytes in murine mPRAT were highly heterogeneous and could be separated into 4 interconnected subpopulations, all expressing the Plin1 gene that encodes the lipid droplet protein Perilipin, which we referred to as mPRAT-ad1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively (Figure 1G-H and S1H). mPRAT-ad1 resembled classical BAs and expressed Ucp1, Cidea, Pank1 and Gk (Figure 1H-I). mPRAT-ad2 was characterized by the expression of Cidea, Pank1 and Gk, but not Ucp1 (Figure 1H-I). In addition, it also expressed detectable levels of Cyp2e1 and Slit3 (Figure 1H-I), two genes which have recently been implicated in thermogenesis regulation (Sun et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2021). Such gene expression pattern suggested that mPRAT-ad2 may contain BA-like cells that could be recruited by stimuli that induce thermogenesis. In contrast, mPRAT-ad3, which expressed higher levels of Cyp2e1 and Slit3, lower levels of Tshr and Slc7a10, but not Aldh1a1 or Lep; and mPRAT-ad4, which expressed Cyp2e1, Slit3, Aldh1a1, Lep and high levels of Tshr and Slc7a10, more closely resembled classical WAs, of which mPRAT-ad4 would appear to be at a more mature stage (Figure 1H-I). Adipocytes of iBAT could also be separated into 4 distinct subpopulations, which we referred to as iBAT-ad1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively (Figure S1I). iBAT-ad1, 2 and 3 contained BAs that expressed different levels of Ucp1 and Cidea, and may correspond to previously identified low- and high-thermogenic BA subpopulations (Song et al., 2020) (Figure S1J-L). Altogether, they comprised over 90% of the total adipocyte population in iBAT (Figure S1I). On the other hand, iBAT-ad4 expressed Cyp2e1, Slit3, Slc7a10, Aldh1a1 and Lep, and module score analysis of signature genes showed it to bear close similarity to the recently identified P4 adipocyte subpopulation that regulates thermogenesis in iBAT (Sun et al., 2020) (Figure S1M). Comparison between mPRAT and iBAT adipocyte transcriptomes using module score analysis revealed that mPRAT-ad1 was more similar to all iBAT BA subpopulations (iBAT-ad1, 2 and 3), while mPRAT-ad3 and 4 were more similar to iBAT-ad4 (Figure S1N). Interestingly, we could not find a match for mPRAT-ad2 among iBAT adipocytes (Figure S1N), suggesting that it represents a distinct subpopulation of adipocytes specific to mPRAT, but absent in classical BAT.
Closer inspection of mPRAT adipocyte composition at 1, 2 and 6 months revealed a gradual decrease in the proportions of mPRAT subpopulations ad1 (43.0, 34.9-and 33.1%, respectively) and ad2 (36.1, 31.2 and 23.9%, respectively), which was accompanied by a reciprocal increase in ad3 (14.7, 26.8 and 29.9%, respectively) and ad4 (6.2, 7.1 and 13.1%, respectively) (Figure 1G), suggesting the existence of a progressive transition in the adipocyte composition of mPRAT during postnatal life. This possibility was further investigated by Monocle 3 trajectory analysis of these cells, which revealed a single continuous trajectory linking the four subpopulations (Figure 1J). Based on the pattern of composition changes observed through time (Figure 1G), we defined mPRAT-ad1 subpopulation as the starting point of the trajectory uncovering pseudo-time values that increased steadily from mPRAT-ad1 to mPRAT-ad4 (Figure 1J-K). Along the pseudo-timeline, BA module genes such as Ucp1, Cidea, Ppargc1b, Gk and Pank1 showed decreasing expression levels, whereas WA module genes such as Npr3, Aldh1a1, Tshr, Slc7a10, Slit3 and Cyp2e1 showed the opposite trend (Figure 1K). Gene ontology enrichment analysis of these genes revealed a progressive transition from catabolic to anabolic processes along the pseudo-time trajectory (Figure 1L). The midpoint of the trajectory, corresponding to the mPRAT-ad2 subpopulation, coincided with the highest expression levels of lipogenic genes, including Acly and Acaca, as well as enrichment in several synthetic pathways (Figure 1K-L). A similar analysis on iBAT adipocytes failed to reveal a distinct trajectory and its pseudo-time length of up to 12.8 (Figure S1O) was much shorter than that found in mPRAT adipocytes, which reached 26.7 (Figure 1J), suggesting a less heterogeneous and more stable adipocyte population in iBAT. Taken together, these results suggested the occurrence of a brown-to-white transition during postnatal development in adipocytes of mouse mPRAT.
Re-clustering of mPRAT ASPC population revealed three subpopulations (referred to as mPRAT-aspc1 to 3, respectively) that shared the expression of the ASPC marker gene Pdgfra (Figure S2A-C). mPRAT-aspc1 (expressing Dpp4, Pi16, Anxa3) was identified as fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs), while mPRAT-aspc2 (expressing Pdgfrb and low levels of Pparg) and mPRAT-aspc3 (expressing high levels of Pparg, Cd36, Cidea) represented preadipocytes at different stages of differentiation (Figure S2B). mPRAT-aspc1 and 2 comprised the majority of the ASPC population at all three time points and a reciprocal switch in their relative proportions was observed between 2 and 6 months of age (Figure S2D). iBAT ASPCs could also be re-clustered into three distinct subpopulations (termed iBAT-aspc1 to 3, respectively), which presented good correspondence to the three ASPCs subpopulations identified in mPRAT (Figure S2E-G). However, unlike mPRAT, iBAT ASPC subpopulations showed more dynamic changes in their relative composition during the three postnatal times examined (Figure S2H). We further investigated the apparent similarities between mPRAT and iBAT ASPCs by co-clustering the two cell populations. This revealed a high degree of overlap between them with similar marker genes and good correspondence among their different subpopulations (Figure S2I-K), indicating similar transcriptomes and suggesting that they may give rise to similar types of adipocytes. Thus, the fact that PRAT-specific mPRAT-ad2 is absent in iBAT suggested to us that those cells may arise from brown-to-white conversion of adipocyte subpopulations rather than ASPC differentiation.
The cellular composition of lPRAT is significantly different from that in eWAT at the transcriptional level
Next, we explored the transcriptome of lPRAT in 2- and 6-month-old C57BL/6J male mice using snRNA-seq. The integrated datasets comprised a total of 6,048 nuclei after filtering (Figure S2L) and allowed us to identify 4 distinct clusters, including adipocytes, ASPCs, macrophages and mesothelial cells (Figure 2A-B). The proportion of adipocytes in lPRAT decreased from 2 to 6 months (70.6% to 46.5%), accompanied by a reciprocal increase in the macrophage population (5.7% to 23.8%) (Figure 2C). Such changes have previously been shown to mark an aging signature in visceral adipose tissue (Lumeng et al., 2011). As expected, lPRAT adipocytes were enriched in WA (Lep and Acvr1c) but not BA markers (Ucp1 and Cidea) (Figure 2B).
Re-clustering of the adipocyte population revealed four distinct subpopulations (lPRAT-ad1 to 4) (Figure 2D), all of which expressed high levels of genes typical of WAT such as Adrb3, Lpl, and Cd36 (Figure 2E). lPRAT-ad1 expressed genes related to lipogenesis (Fasn, Acly), endocytosis (Ighm, Anxa2) and stress response (Fgf1, Hif1a) (Figure 2E). lPRAT-ad-2 comprised more than half of the total lPRAT adipocyte population (Figure 2D) and expressed high levels of genes that are involved in adipogenesis regulation, such as Irf2 and Mitf (Figure 2E). lPRAT-ad3 and 4 expressed genes that oppose lipogenesis (Cdk8) and control lipid handling (Camk1d) (Figure 2E). Reciprocal changes in the relative proportions of lPRAT-ad3 and lPRAT-ad4 were observed from 2 to 6 months: lPRAT-ad3 increased from 4.7% to 17.2% at the expense of lPRAT-ad4 that decreased from 21.5% to 4.1% (Figure 2D). We then compared the transcriptome of lPRAT adipocytes with that of eWAT, a better characterized visceral fat depot, using a previously published eWAT snRNA-seq dataset (Sarvari et al., 2021). Unexpectedly, the two populations showed only a partial overlap (Figure 2F). Specifically, lPRAT-ad1 resembled the lipogenic adipocyte and the stressed lipid scavenging adipocyte subpopulations previously described in eWAT, while lPRAT-ad2 was more similar to the lipid-scavenging adipocyte subpopulation of eWAT. In contrast, however, lPRAT-ad3 and 4 showed no overlap with previously identified subpopulations of eWAT adipocytes (Figure 2F), suggesting that they may represent unique cell types to the lPRAT depot.
The ASPC population of lPRAT could be subclustered into two subpopulations: FAPs characterized by expression of Dpp4 and Pi16 (lPRAT-aspc1) and preadipocytes expressing Pdgfrb, Pparg and Cd36 (lPRAT-aspc2) that comprised over 85% of the ASPC population at both time points (Figure 2G-H). Co-clustering of the lPRAT APSC population with the one previously defined in eWAT by Sarvari et al. revealed a partial overlap with their FAP2 and FAP3 subpopulations, although the bulk of lPRAT ASPCs appeared largely unrelated to ASPCs from eWAT (Figure 2I). Sub-clustering of the macrophages in lPRAT identified three subpopulations (lPRAT-mac1 to 3), all of which expressed typical macrophage markers, including Adgre1 and Mctp1 (Figure 2J-K). lPRAT-mac1 specifically expressed Trem2 and Atp6v0d2, signature macrophage genes that have recently been proposed to participate in the maintenance of metabolic homeostasis under high-fat diet (Dai et al., 2022; Jaitin et al., 2019) (Figure 2K). Intriguingly, this subpopulation increased almost 10-fold (from 8.1% to 73.8%) from 2 to 6 months (Figure 2J), in line with the notion that aging mimics some of the gene signatures induced by high-fat diet (Lumeng et al., 2011). A reciprocal decrease in proportion of both lPRAT-mac2, characterized by Fn1 expression, and lPRAT-mac3, marked by expression of Cd163 and Plekhg5, was also found during this period of time (Figure 2J-K). Unexpectedly, comparison with the macrophage subpopulations identified in eWAT by Sarvari et el. revealed that lPRAT and eWAT macrophage populations were very different from each other (Figure 2L), suggesting dissimilar local microenvironments in the two tissues (Lavin et al., 2014). Taken together, these results indicated that the cellular composition of lPRAT is significantly different from that of eWAT, despite both being visceral WAT depots.
Evidence of brown-to-white adipocyte conversion in the peri-ureter region of mPRAT
UCP1 immunostaining in kidney explants and attached PRAT from juvenile (6 weeks) and adult (8 months) mice was more intense in the anterior portion of the mPRAT that wraps around the renal blood vessels (herein termed peri-vascular PRAT, pvPRAT) compared to the posterior region covering the ureter (herein termed peri-ureter PRAT, puPRAT) (Figure S3A-B), suggesting an uneven distribution of UCP1-expressing BAs in mPRAT. In addition, UCP1 staining was decreased in adult compared to juvenile mPRAT and absent from lPRAT, as expected (Figure S3A). In order to investigate brown-to-white conversion of mPRAT adipocytes during postnatal life, we used the Ucp1Cre;Ai14 mouse line that drives expression of tdTomato in BAs from the moment these activate the Ucp1 gene (Kong et al., 2014). UCP1 immunostaining of mPRAT sections in 2-month-old Ucp1Cre;Ai14 mice enabled us to assess whether and to which extent tdTomato+ adipocytes had lost UCP1 expression, an indication of brown-to-white conversion (Figure 3A). This analysis revealed that 61.8% of tdTomato+ cells in puPRAT no longer expressed UCP1 by 2 months of age (Figure 3A-B). In contrast, only 7.5% of tdTomato+ cells did not express UCP1 in pvPRAT at this age (Figure 3A-B). These results suggested a significant loss of the BA phenotype in puPRAT, consistent with brown-to-white conversion in this region. In agreement with this, many tdTomato+/UCP1- adipocytes displayed one large unilocular lipid droplet, a morphological hallmark of WAs (insets in Figure 3A). In line with our analysis of kidney explants, puPRAT contained a significantly lower proportion of tdTomato+ adipocytes (Figure 3C) and adipocytes that expressed UCP1 at 2-month of age (UCP1+) (Figure 3D) compared to pvPRAT. A similar analysis of iBAT failed to reveal evidence of brown-to-white conversion (Figure 3A-B), in agreement with previous studies (Huang et al., 2022). Histological analysis of tissue sections of mouse PRAT and iBAT from 1 to 6 months old revealed that the size of lipid droplets increased by around 5.5-fold in puPRAT and about 2.3-fold in pvPRAT (Figure 3E-F), in agreement with a more pronounced brown-to-white transition in the puPRAT region. Immunostaining of the puPRAT region for CYP2E1 and ALDH1A1, markers of mPRAT-ad3/4 and -ad4 subpopulations of mPRAT WAs, respectively, revealed that a proportion of tdTomato+/UCP1- adipocytes expressed these genes (34% and 23%, respectively, Figure 3G-I). This indicated that cells that are initially BAs can undergo brown-to-white conversion all the way to mPRAT-ad3 and -ad4 WA subtypes, as predicted by our pseudo-time trajectory analysis. The remaining fraction of tdTomato+/UCP1- adipocytes have likely transitioned to the mPRAT-ad2 subtype. To visualize the mPRAT-ad2 adipocytes, we collected pvPRAT and puPRAT from the Ucp1CreERT2;Ai14 mice one day after the last tamoxifen injection and stained with CYP2E1 antibody and BODIPY. With over 93% specific labelling rates of the Ucp1CreERT2 (Figure S3C-D), we revealed a significantly higher percentage of mPRAT-ad2 cells (Tomato-&CYP2E1-&BODIPY+) in puPRAT compared with pvPRAT (Figure S3E).
Together, these results pointed to the existence of a subpopulation of BAs, the majority of which resided in puPRAT, that underwent brown-to-white conversion during postnatal growth, characterized by loss of UCP1 and increase in lipid droplet size, to become mPRAT-ad3 and 4 subpopulations of WAs as well as the more intermediate subpopulation of mPRAT-ad2.
Cold exposure prevents brown-to-white conversion and induces UCP1 expression in mPRAT
A significant increase in UCP1 mRNA and protein levels was observed in mPRAT and iBAT of 1-month-old mice following 4 weeks cold exposure (2 weeks at 18°C + 2 weeks at 10°C), but UCP1 expression could not be detected in lPRAT under either condition (Figure 4A-C). Cold exposure had a dramatic effect on lipid droplet size in pvPRAT and iBAT, but less so in puPRAT, which retained several large lipid droplets even after cold exposure (Figure 4D). These results indicated that mPRAT, especially the peri-vascular region, can indeed respond to cold exposure in a fashion similar to canonical BAT from iBAT. Not only did cold exposure enhanced the thermogenic phenotype of mPRAT, but it also counteracted brown-to-white conversion of BAs in this tissue. Following cold exposure, the proportion of tdTomato+/UCP1- adipocytes in Ucp1CreERT2;Ai14 mice was significantly lower compared to room temperature in both puPRAT and pvPRAT (Figure 4E-G). Interestingly, the proportion of tdTomato-/UCP1+ adipocytes was increased after cold exposure in both areas (Figure 4H). This population of cold-recruited BAs might have arisen de novo through differentiation of ASPCs and/or conversion from UCP1- adipocytes. Using PdgfraCreERT2;Ai14 mice subjected to the same experimental conditions, we found that cold exposure increased the proportion of tdTomato+/UCP1+ adipocytes (namely ASPC-derived BAs) in puPRAT by a much smaller magnitude (2.3-fold) than the total increase in cold-recruited BAs (10-fold), while the difference was less dramatic in pvPRAT (4.4-vs 2.2 fold) (Figure 4H-K). Adipocytes in pvPRAT and puPRAT of the PdgfraCre;Ai14 mice were 100% tdTomato+, indicating they were entirely derived from Pdgfra-expressing cells (Figure S4). These results indicated that new BAs induced by cold exposure were mainly derived from UCP1- adipocytes rather than de novo ASPC differentiation in puPRAT (Figure 4L), whereas the two processes contributed equally in the peri-vascular region. Cold exposure also affected brown-to-white conversion in adult animals, as shown by a significant reduction in the proportion of tdTomato+/UCP1- adipocytes in both puPRAT and pvPRAT (Figure 5A-C). Similar increase in the proportion of tdTomato-/UCP1+ adipocytes after cold exposure was also observed in both areas (highlighted by yellow arrows in Figure 5B).
mPRAT-ad2 is the major adipocyte subpopulation induced by cold exposure to become BA in adult mPRAT
In order to reveal the first line of response to cold exposure and identify the main affected subpopulation among mPRAT adipocytes, we subjected 6-month-old mice to a more acute cold exposure (4°C for 3 days) and collected the mPRAT for snRNA-seq analysis. As expected, cold exposure caused a dramatic decrease in lipid droplet size in pvPRAT, puPRAT, iBAT and iWAT (Figure S5A). After filtering (Figure S5B), a total of 7,387 nuclei could be clustered into adipocytes, ASPCs, macrophages, vascular cells (endothelial cell and pericyte) and mesothelial cells (Figure S5C, E), without apparent difference in the relative proportions of these cell types between mice exposed to cold and those kept at room temperature (Figure S5D). Upon sub-clustering, the adipocyte population was separated into four subpopulations (Figure 5D-F) that were highly similar to the four mPRAT adipocyte subpopulations identified in our previous datasets (mPRAT-ad1-4) (Figure S5F). Interestingly, cold exposure had dramatic effects on the composition of mPRAT: the proportion of mPRAT-ad1 doubled, the mPRAT-ad2 cells all disappeared, the mPRAT-ad3 subpopulation was reduced by 30%, while the proportion of mPRAT-ad4 cells remained unaffected (Figure 5E). As no enhanced cell death was observed upon cold exposure (Figure S5G), it is possible that the entire mPRAT-ad2 and part of the mPRAT-ad3 subpopulations were converted to the thermogenic Ucp1+ mPRAT-ad1 subpopulation, upon a dramatic increase in Ucp1 expression following cold exposure (Figure 5F). Thus, the mPRAT-ad2 subpopulation that underwent brown-to-white conversion during postnatal life would appear to be the major subpopulation that reverted to a thermogenic, Ucp1+ phenotype upon cold exposure in adult mPRAT. Comparison of differentially enriched genes and gene regulatory networks in mPRAT-ad1, 3 and 4 after cold exposure or at room temperature are presented in Figure 5G-J. We also noted that the proportions of ASPC subpopulations in mPRAT remained relatively unchanged after cold exposure (Figure S5H-I), suggesting that precursor cells may be less sensitive to acute environmental temperature drop and have a limited contribution to mature adipocyte phenotypes through de novo adipogenesis after cold exposure.
mPRAT-ad2 subtype is transcriptionally different from iWAT adipocytes under both room temperature and cold exposure conditions
Having demonstrated the existence of an adipocyte subpopulation in mPRAT that can be induced to express a thermogenic profile in response to cold exposure, we sought to perform a comparison with the transcriptional profiles of iBAT and iWAT adipocytes subjected to the same conditions in the same animals. In iBAT, analysis of 27,717 nuclei after filtering (Figure S6A) revealed no obvious differences in the proportions of all cell types (Figure S6B-D) or ASPC subpopulations (Figure S6H-I) between room temperature and cold exposure. Following cold exposure, all adipocyte subpopulations showed similar transcriptomes with those identified in the longitudinal datasets (Figure S6G) and experienced a dramatic increase in the expression levels of BA marker genes, including iBAT-ad4 which had not shown expression for any of those genes at room temperature (Figure S6F). Proportion of the iBAT-ad1 subpopulation was increased while that of iBAT-ad3 decreased (Figure S6E), indicating that cold exposure can induce cell type conversions among Ucp1+ adipocyte subpopulations in iBAT, in agreement with previous observations (Song et al., 2020). In iWAT, analysis of 11,486 nuclei revealed clusters of adipocytes, ASPCs, immune cells (macrophage, B cell, T cell, neutrophil and dendritic cell) and vascular cells (endothelial cell and pericyte), whose relative proportions remained unchanged after cold exposure (Figure S7A-E). Five subclusters were identified within the adipocyte population, herein termed iWAT-ad1 to 5 (Figure S7F-H). As expected, the adipocytes expressing high levels of Ucp1 and Cidea (iWAT-ad1, namely BeAs) were only present in animals that were exposed to cold (Figure S7G). Surprisingly, a second adipocyte subpopulation that was almost specific to cold exposed animals (iWAT-ad2) did not express any of the common thermogenic markers, but instead specifically expressed genes involved in lipogenesis (Acss2, Fasn and Acly) (Figure S7G-H). This is in agreement with a recent study showing that expression of lipogenic genes is highly induced in iWAT adipocytes upon cold exposure (Holman et al., 2023). In contrast to iWAT-ad1 and ad2, the abundance of iWAT-ad4 cells decreased by half following cold exposure (Figure S7G). Similar to mPRAT and iBAT, no differences were detected in the proportions of different iWAT ASPCs subtypes following cold exposure (Figure S7I-J).
Surprisingly, little overlap, if at all, could be found between subpopulations of mPRAT and iWAT adipocytes in mice housed at room temperature (Figure 6A-B). In fact, the mPRAT and iWAT adipocytes were mostly exclusive from each other, besides the slight overlap between the 2 mature WA subpopulations (mPRAT-ad4 and iWAT-ad5) (Figure 6A-B). Thus, the cold-inducible subpopulation of mPRAT-ad2 adipocytes would appear to be quite distinct from adipocyte subpopulations found in either iBAT or iWAT under room temperature condition. Upon cold exposure, BeAs in iWAT (iWAT-ad1) showed a good correspondence with a fraction of the mPRAT-ad1 subpopulation of BAs in mPRAT (highlighted in grey in Figure 6C-D). By label transfer, we found that most of the mPRAT-ad1 adipocytes that did not overlap with iWAT BeAs were more similar to mPRAT-ad2 of the room temperature dataset (highlighted in grey in Figure S6K), suggesting they may be derived from mPRAT-ad2 adipocytes that had undergone brown-to-white conversion. Thus, mPRAT BAs that arise from the mPRAT-ad2 subpopulation after cold exposure have a distinct transcriptome to that of cold-induced BeAs in iWAT. Analysis of the hierarchical relationships between different adipocyte subpopulations in the three fat depots following cold exposure revealed that both the BA and WA populations of mPRAT were more closely related to iBAT than iWAT populations (Figure 6E). As the ASPC population were rather similar in the different depots at the different temperature conditions (Figure S5H, S6H, S7I), we performed cell–cell communication analysis on the populations of adipocyte in the three depots based on ligand, receptor and cofactor interactions using the CellChat algorithm (Jin et al., 2021). At room temperature, mPRAT adipocyte subpopulations showed greater and stronger intercellular communication than subpopulations in iBAT or iWAT (Figure 6F-G), which may be related to the ongoing brown-to-white conversion in mPRAT at room temperature. In contrast, cold exposure reverted these relationships, reducing the number and strength of interactions in mPRAT while increasing interactions in iBAT and iWAT (Figure 6F-G). Thus, both under room temperature and cold exposure conditions, mPRAT adipocytes display very different levels of cell-cell communication compared to iBAT and iWAT adipocytes.
Discussion
Brown-to-white conversion of BAs, also known as “whitening”, has been observed in BAT of a number of mammalian species, including rat (Florez-Duquet et al., 1998; Horan et al., 1988; McDonald et al., 1988), rabbit (Derry et al., 1972; Huang et al., 2022), bovine and ovine (Basse et al., 2015; Casteilla et al., 1989; Gemmell et al., 1972), and human (Rogers, 2015). On the other hand, BA whitening does not occur in mouse iBAT as shown in the present and previous studies (Huang et al., 2022). In PRAT, a continuous replacement of BAs by WAs during aging has been suggested based on analysis of adipocyte morphology by a study on the Japanese population (Tanuma et al., 1976). Also, so-called “dormant” BAT has been observed throughout the PRAT depot of an adult kidney donor (Jespersen et al., 2019) and habituation to low-temperature environment has been reported to result in acquisition of BA-like morphology and UCP1 expression in human PRAT (Efremova et al., 2020). In the present study, we used snRNA-seq to explore the transcriptome dynamics of mouse PRAT, revealing the existence of brown-to-white conversion in the medial region of the tissue during postnatal development, as confirmed by the loss of UCP1 protein in genetically traced adipocytes. Non-shivering thermogenesis negatively correlates with body mass in a large number of eutherian mammals, as many of them have developed other strategies to cope with low environmental temperatures, such as hibernation and torpor(Oelkrug et al., 2015). On the other hand, small-sized mammals with large body surface to volume ratio rely more heavily on BAT for thermogenesis, which may possibly explain why iBAT whitening does not occur in mice. Although our demonstration of a whitening process in the mouse mPRAT would seem to run against this notion, its deep visceral location suggests that the thermogenic capacity of this tissue may have other physiological functions. The fact that the entire Ucp1-/Cidea+ mPRAT-ad2 subpopulation was able to become Ucp1+ under short-term cold exposure suggests that a significant portion of mPRAT adipocytes retain thermogenic capacity.
Analysis of the transcriptomes of the different adipocyte subpopulations in mPRAT revealed that their ability to acquire a thermogenic phenotype in response to cold exposure was negatively correlated with the extent to which they expressed WAT marker genes. Thus, while Cyp2e1, Slit3, Aldh1a1 and Lep were all expressed by the majority of cold-resistant adipocytes in mPRAT-ad4, only some of the highly cold-responsive Cidea+ cells in mPRAT-ad2 expressed Cyp2e1 and Slit3 and none expressed Aldh1a1 or Lep. On the other hand, Cidea- cells in mPRAT-ad3, a small fraction of which can response to cold, were mostly positive for Cyp2e1 and Slit3, but did not express Aldh1a1 or Lep. The fact that mPRAT-ad2 cells express markers of both BA and WA, together with an absence of unique markers for this subpopulation is in line with their intermediate and plastic phenotype. Our tracing studies showed that only a rather small fraction of adipocytes undergoing brown-to-white conversion in postnatal life expressed mPRAT-ad3 and -ad4 markers CYP2E1 and ALDH1A1, suggesting that the majority of mPRAT-ad3 and -ad4 WAs in PRAT must derive from differentiation of ASPCs. This also agrees with them being most similar to iBAT-ad4 cells that also derive from ASPCs, given the lack of brown-to-white conversion in the iBAT depot. ASPCs in both PRAT and iBAT were also very similar. We cannot at present exclude the possibility that the limited cold-responsiveness of mPRAT-ad3 could be due to inappropriate cold exposure for induction of a robust thermogenic phenotype. We also note that, although Cyp2e1 and Aldh1a1 are always co-expressed in iBAT adipocytes (Sun et al., 2020), only Aldh1a1, not Cyp2e1, distinguished cold-responsive from unresponsive adipocytes in mPRAT, indicating distinct expression patterns and possibly functions for these genes in the two fat depots.
mPRAT-ad2 cells shared with iWAT BeAs the capacity to upregulate Ucp1 expression and acquire a thermogenic phenotype in response to cold (Petrovic et al., 2010; Wu et al., 2012). However, none of the subpopulations of iWAT adipocytes showed any similarity to mPRAT-ad2 cells at the transcriptional level. This convergent phenotype may be explained by the different origins of the two depots. Thus, while all adipocyte subpopulations in iWAT arise by differentiation from ASPCs, mPRAT-ad2 adipocytes are derived from brown-to-white conversion of BAs and thus retain a number of molecular signatures from their parental cells. Even after cold exposure, the transcriptome of thermogenic BAs in PRAT (mPRAT-ad1) are more similar to BAs in iBAT than iWAT. These BAs are likely composed of cells from three different origins: recruited mPRAT-ad2 adipocytes, pre-existing mPRAT-ad1 cells similar to iBAT BAs, and BAs that arise from cold-induced de novo adipogenesis. iWAT BeAs derived by cold-induction are mainly derived from Sma-expressing precursor cells (Berry et al., 2016), although interconversion between BeAs and WAs has also been observed after cold exposure (Rosenwald et al., 2013). Distinct cellular and/or developmental origins may therefore explain the differences observed among cold-induced adipocytes in the three depots. Adipocytes in BAT and iWAT are known to have different developmental origins. While classical BAs from BAT depots are derived from a subpopulation of dermomyotomes that expresses Myf5, En1 and Pax7 (Atit et al., 2006; Lepper and Fan, 2010; Sanchez-Gurmaches et al., 2012; Seale et al., 2008), iWAT BeAs emerge from multiple origins, including a Myf5-negative cell lineage derived from Myh11+ smooth muscle-like precursors (Long et al., 2014) and progenitors expressing Pax3 and/or Myf5 (Sanchez-Gurmaches and Guertin, 2014). On the other hand, BAs in PRAT arise from a lineage of Pax3+ but Myf5- cells (Sanchez-Gurmaches and Guertin, 2014). Discrepancies in embryonic origin between mPRAT and iWAT beige adipocytes may have established unique transcriptome signatures that persist during postnatal life. Another possibility is that the kinetics of thermogenic induction, a.k.a. browning may be different between the two depots such that longer cold exposure results in more similar transcriptional profiles in the two tissues.
One possible limitation of our study is that we only used mice from one genetic background (C57BL/6J), which is known to display a metabolic phenotype that is more prone to develop obesity (Bachmann et al., 2022). The transcriptomes and trajectories of cells from fat depots of other strains may deviate from our findings. In addition, the oldest mice that we have analyzed in the present study were 6-month-old, which is only equivalent to the human adult stage. Future studies should focus on older mice to investigate whether a more complete brown-to-white conversion takes place during aging as well as the effect of cold exposure on this process. Moreover, lack of specific marker genes for the mPRAT-ad2 subpopulation makes it difficult to generate Cre driver strains that can be used to specifically trace the fate of these adipocytes and visualize the whitening process in a more direct way.
In summary, our work identifies a cold-recruitable adipocyte subpopulation in mPRAT derived by brown-to-white conversion of BAs with a transcriptomic profile distinct from iWAT BeAs. The discrepancy observed in this process between pvPRAT and puPRAT could be functionally related to the idiosyncrasies of kidney blood supply and urine transport, respectively. Previous studies have demonstrated the clinical relevance of PRAT in clear cell renal cell carcinoma invasion (Wei et al., 2021) and pathological hypertension (Li et al., 2022). Future studies should focus on exploring the physiological role of brown-to-white conversion in different regions of mPRAT and the molecular mechanisms that govern its regulation. Understanding why mPRAT has pre-existing BAs that gradually convert to WAs during postnatal development may contribute to the development of novel therapeutic strategies for renal disorders. More generally, harnessing our understanding of brown-to-white adipocyte conversion may lead to strategies to prevent or delay its course and thus enhance the thermogenic capacity of adipose tissues to mitigate the consequences of metabolic disorders, such as obesity and diabetes.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Dr. Zhinan Yin, Jinan University for providing the Ucp1CreERT2 mouse strain. The authors also thank Hong Jin and Dr. Jing Yang, Peking University for technical support on nuclei extraction and the ImmuneView method, respectively. This work was supported by research grants to C.F.I. from Peking University, Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing, Swedish Cancer Society (Cancerfonden, contract nr. 222135Pj01H) and Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet, contract nr. 2020-01923_3); and a startup grant to M.X. from Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet, contract nr. 2021-01805).
Declaration of interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Data and materials availability
All raw sequencing data reported in the present study were deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database under accession number GSE241800. All codes to repeat snRNA-seq analysis were in the GitHub repository (https://github.com/HouyuZhang/PRAT_project).
Materials and methods
Animals
All animal experiments were performed in compliance with the protocol approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of Peking University (Psych-XieM-2) and the Chinese Institute of Brain Research (CIBR-IACUC-035). C57BL/6J mice were housed under a 12:12 hour light/dark cycle with free access to food and water. For all cold exposure experiments, animals were housed individually in a temperature and light-controlled incubator (Darth Carter, Hefei, China). Ucp1Cre (JAX:024670) (Kong et al., 2014), PdfraCreERT2 (JAX:018280), PdfraCre (JAX:013148) and Ai14 (JAX:007914) (Madisen et al., 2010) strains were purchased from Jackson Laboratory. Ucp1CreERT2 strain (Rosenwald et al., 2013) was a gift from Dr. Zhinan Yin, Jinan University, China. For genetic tracing, tamoxifen (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. T5648) dissolved in corn oil (Solarbio, Cat. No. C7030) was intraperitoneally injected at a dose of 2 mg per animal per day for 4 (UCP1CreERT2) or 5 (PdfraCreERT2) consecutive days. All animals used in the present study are male.
Dissection of mouse PRAT
lPRAT was separated from the mPRAT by a thin layer of fascia membrane at both the anterior and posterior renal capsule pole. The adrenal gland and surrounding adipose tissue located at the anterior renal capsule pole were surgically removed by cutting along the fascia membrane on the lateral side and the anterior renal hilum edge on the medial side. mPRAT was defined as the adipose tissue located between the anterior renal hilum edge and the posterior renal capsule pole. Within the mPRAT, peri-vascular PRAT (pvPRAT) was defined as the adipose tissue located between the anterior and posterior renal hilum edge that wraps the renal vessels, and peri-ureter PRAT (puPRAT) was defined as the adipose tissue located between the posterior renal hilum edge and the posterior renal capsule pole that wraps the ureter. For histological analysis, the entire PRAT together with the kidney was taken for sectioning to accurately define different regions of the tissue using the kidney as a landmark.
Nuclei isolation for snRNA-seq
Nuclei isolation from adipose tissue was performed according to a published protocol with slight modification (Van Hauwaert et al., 2021). Briefly, adipose tissues were minced in a petri dish containing 500 mL nuclei isolation buffer (NIB) that contains 250 mM sucrose (Solarbio, Cat. No. S8271), 10 mM HEPES (Solarbio, Cat. No. H8090), 1.5 mM MgCl2 (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. M8266), 10 mM KCl (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. P5405), 0.001% IGEPAL CA-630 (NP-40) (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. I3021), 0.2 mM DTT (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. D9779), and 1 U/μL RNase inhibitor (Solarbio, Cat. No. R8061) in DEPC-treated water. The samples were further homogenized using a 2 mL Dounce homogenizer (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. D8938), applying three strokes with the loose pestle. The homogenate was filtered through a 70 μm cell strainer (Falcon, Cat. No. 352350) and centrifuged at 500 g for 5 min at 4°C. The nuclei pellet was resuspended in 2 mL NIB and centrifuged at 300 g for 3 min at 4°C. Finally, the nuclear pellet was resuspended in 300 μL nuclei resuspension buffer that contains 2% BSA (Sigma-Aldrich, Cat. No. A1933), 1.5 mM MgCl2, 1 U/μL RNase inhibitor in PBS. All solutions were sterile filtered prior to use. All procedures were performed on ice.
snRNA-seq library construction and sequencing
Nuclei suspensions were stained with 10 μg/mL 7-AAD (Invitrogen, Cat. No. A1310) and sorted on a BD Fusion Flow Cytometer (BD FACSMelody™4-Way Cell Sorter) with a 100 µm nozzle. Nuclei were counted using a Countstar Automated Cell Counter (Countstar Rigel S5) and approximately 20,000 nuclei per sample were loaded into the 10x Chromium system using the Single-Cell 3′ Reagent Kit v3.1 according to the manufacturer’s instructions (10x Genomics). GEM-Reverse Transcription was performed with a thermal cycler using the following program: 53℃ for 45 minutes, 85℃ for 5 minutes, and held at 4℃. After reverse transcription and cell barcoding, emulsions were lysed and cDNA was isolated and purified with Cleanup Mix containing DynaBeads and SPRIselect reagent (Thermo Scientific), followed by PCR amplification. The cDNA was then evaluated using an Agilent Bioanalyzer. Enzymatic fragmentation and size selection were applied to optimize the cDNA amplicon size. Then, the P5, P7, i7 and i5 sample indexes and TruSeq Read 2 (read 2 primer sequence) were added by end repair, A-tailing, adaptor ligation, and PCR. The final libraries containing the P5 and P7 primers were sequenced by an Illumina NovaSeq 6000 sequencer with 150 bp paired-end reads, aiming for a coverage of approximately 50,000 raw reads per nucleus.
snRNA-seq data analysis
Raw fastq sequencing data were processed using Cell Ranger version 7.0.0 with the “--include-introns” parameter to include reads mapped to introns from Ensembl annotation. The reference genomes used for mouse was mm10. The raw nuclei-gene count matrices were processed by CellBender version 0.2.2 (Fleming et al., 2023) to remove ambient RNA contamination and empty droplets. The processed count matrices that include validated nuclei were used for downstream analyses with Seurat version 4.3.0 (Hao et al., 2021).
For single dataset pre-processing, we removed low-quality nuclei according to the following criteria: 1. nuclei contain less than 500 or more than 6000 genes; 2. nuclei contain more than 15% of total reads from mitochondrial genes; 3. nuclei contain less than 1000 or more than 50000 UMI counts. Then, genes expressed in less than 10 nuclei were removed. Doublet score was calculated using DoubletFinder version 2.0.3 (McGinnis et al., 2019) and 8% of the nuclei that had the highest doublet score were removed according to 10x Genomics’ recommendation. The “LogNormalize” function was used to perform normalization and z-scale was performed using the “ScaleData” function. Highly variable genes (HVGs) were calculated by the Variance-Stabilizing Transformation algorithm and the top 2000 HVGs for each dataset were used for downstream analysis. Kidney-related cells and lymphocytes that come from contaminations during dissection were removed from the datasets prior to further analysis.
For multiple dataset integration, the Canonical Correlation Analysis algorithm was used. Specifically, the “SelectIntegrationFeatures” and “FindIntegrationAnchors” functions were used to find integration features based on HVGs and multiple datasets were integrated using the “IntegrateData” function in Seurat. Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed using the “RunPCA” function to obtain the first 30 principal components. Nuclei were then projected into the low dimensional space using the Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection (UMAP) algorithm. Nuclei clusters were defined using the Louvain algorithm via the “FindClusters” function. Data embedding for UMAP clustering was performed according to the top 2,000 variable genes and the first 30 principal components. Marker genes for each cluster were calculated using the “FindAllMarkers” function by a Wilcox test (log2 fold change > 0.25) and clusters were manually annotated either based on marker genes reported in literature or by searching top markers genes against the PanglaoDB database (Franzen et al., 2019). Marker gene lists for all datasets were summarized in Table S1 (https://github.com/HouyuZhang/PRAT_project/blob/main/Supplementary_Table1_Marker_gene_lists_for_all_datasets.xlsx).
The low-dimensional dataset from Seurat was applied to Monocle version 3 (Cao et al., 2019) for trajectory inference using the partitioned approximate graph abstraction algorithm. A principal graph-embedding procedure based on the SimplePPT algorithm was applied via the “learn_graph” function to learn a principal graph representing the possible paths that the nuclei can take as they progress. Once the trajectories were defined, we manually selected the root node that resides specific population. For the time-series mPRAT trajectory analysis, we defined root node resides the Ucp1 highest as the starting point. Pseudo-time for each nucleus was computed as its geodesic distance back to our defined root nodes in the trajectory using the principal graph as a guide. Then, spatial correlation analysis by the Moran’s I test was conducted via the “graph_test” function to find DEGs across our defined trajectory.
For cluster similarity analysis, top 50 marker genes ranked by q-value from the reference cluster were selected as a gene module, then the module score for each cell of the query cluster was calculated by the “AddModuleScore_UCell” function (Andreatta and Carmona, 2021). A label transfer method from Seurat was used to learn annotations among snRNA-seq dataset. Specifically, the “FindTransferAnchors” function was used between reference dataset and query dataset to find anchors, which were further used to annotate each cell in query dataset by the annotation in reference dataset by the “TransferData” function.
DEGs between two clusters were calculated using the “FindMarkers” function in Seurat. Specifically, genes expressed in more than 10% of cells of either cluster were compared by a Wilcoxon Rank Sum test. The “compareCluster” and “enrichGO” function of the clusterProfiler version 4.8.1 (Wu et al., 2021) was used to find enriched gene ontology (GO) pathways using the species-specific annotation database (org.Mm.eg.db). The Benjamini-Hochberg methods were used for p-value correction with 0.05 as a threshold. For mPRAT-RT and mPRAT-CE analysis, the Metascape website version 3.5 (Zhou et al., 2019) was used to predict gene regulatory network (GRN) and functional enrichment against GO, KEGG, Reactome and WikiPathways database.
The cell-cell communication analysis was conducted with CellChat version 1.6.0 using the mouse database. The “computeCommunProbPathway” function was used to compute the communication probability on signaling pathway level by summarizing all related ligands or receptors, p-value < 0.05 was used to determine significant interactions.
Gene Expression Analysis
Total RNA was extracted from snap-frozen adipose tissues using the TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, Cat. No. 15596018). cDNA was synthesized from 1 μg of RNA using the H Minus cDNA first strand synthesis kit (Thermo Scientific, Cat. No. K1652). Relative mRNA expression was determined by quantitative PCR using the PowerUpTM SYBR TM Green Master Mix (Applied Biosystems, Cat. No. A25742) in a CFX96TM Real-Time PCR Detection System (Biorad). Cq values were normalized to levels of Ywhaz using the ΔΔ-Ct method. The primer sequences are as following: mouse Ucp1 forward 5’-GGCCTCTACGACTCAGTCCA-3’, reverse 5’-TAAGCCGGCTGAGATCTTGT-3’; mouse Ywhaz forward 5’-CAGTAGATGGAGAAAGATTTGC-3’, reverse 5’-GGGACAATTAGGGAAGTAAGT-3’.
Immunoblotting and antibodies
0.3 mL of 100% ethanol was added to the collected interphase and lower organic layer from the TRIzol lysate and incubated for 3 minutes. The mixture was centrifuged at 2000g for 5 minutes at 4°C to pellet the DNA. The phenol-ethanol supernatant was transferred to a new tube and 1.5 mL of isopropanol was added. After a 10-minute incubation, the mixture was centrifuged at 12,000g for 10 minutes at 4°C to pellet the proteins. The pellet was washed three times with a washing solution consisting of 0.3 M guanidine hydrochloride (Solarbio, Cat. No. G8070) in 95% ethanol, followed by one more wash with 100% ethanol. The protein pellet was air-dried and resuspended in 200µL of 1% SDS (Solarbio, Cat. No. S8010) at 50°C in a heating block. Protein concentration was determined using a BCA protein assay kit (Solarbio, Cat. No. PC0020) in a Cytation 5 imaging reader (Thermo Fisher). Protein samples were prepared using the Laemmli buffer (Biorad, Cat. No. 1610747), supplemented with 20% 2-mercaptoethanol and boiled at 98°C. Reducing SDS-PAGE gel was made using the SDS-PAGE Gel kit (Biorad, Cat. No. 1610183). 15 μg sample was loaded into SDS-PAGE gel and transferred onto PVDF membranes (Biorad, Cat. No. 1620177). The blots were processed with a chemiluminescence HRP Substrate (Millipore, Cat. No. WBKLS05000) and imaged with the Amersham ImageQuant 800 Western blot imaging system. Intensity of target bands were quantified using the ImageJ version 1.53k.
The antibodies and the working concentrations are as follows: UCP1: 1:1000 dilution (Sigma Aldrich, Cat. No. U6382), α-tubulin: 1:1000 dilution (Santa Sruz, Cat. No. sc-8035), anti-rabbit IgG: 1:2000 dilution (Cell Signaling, Cat. No. 7074S).
Hematoxylin and Eosin (HE) and Tunel staining
Freshly collected adipose tissues were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde overnight at 4°C and rinsed with PBS. After serial dehydration in ethanol, tissues were embedded in paraffin and sectioned into 5-μm thick sections for staining with the HE solution (Servicebio, Cat. No. G1003). For Tunel staining, sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated by serial xylene and ethanol before antigen retrieval. Then, sections were permeabilized using PBS with 0.1% Triton and blocked with 3% BSA. Tunel Assay Kit (Servicebio, Cat. No. G1501) was used to detect DNA breaks formed during apoptosis. Perilipin-1 at 1:100 dilution (Cell Signaling, Cat. No. 9349S) was used to stain all adipocytes. DAPI was used to stain nuclei.
Immunofluorescence staining
Whole-mount immunofluorescence was performed as previously described (Jiang et al., 2018). Briefly, mice were anesthetized and perfused with PBS, before being sacrificed for adipose tissue dissection followed by overnight fixation in 1% paraformaldehyde at 4°C. The tissues were washed in PBS containing 0.01% tween-20 (PBST) before being embedded in 5% low-melting agarose and sectioned into 100-400 μm-thick slices using a Vibratome (Leica, VT1200). Slices were blocked and permeabilized using PBST supplemented with 5% donkey serum and 0.3% Triton X at room temperature for 30 minutes. If necessary, the M.O.M. Blocking Reagent (Vector, Cat. No. MKB-2213-1) was applied to block mouse endogenous IgG for background reduction. The following antibodies and chemicals were used: rabbit-host UCP1, 1:100 (Sigma Aldrich, Cat. No. U6382), mouse-host UCP1, 1:100 (Invitrogen, Cat. No. MA5-31534), mouse-host ALDH1A, 1:50 (Proteintech, Cat. No. 60171-1-Ig), rabbit-host CYP2E1, 1:50 (Abcam, Cat. No. ab28146), rabbit-host PLIN1, 1:100 (Cell Signaling, Cat. No. 9349), Alexa Fluor 405 mouse IgG H&L, 1:1000 (Invitrogen, Cat. No. A48257), Alexa Fluor 647 rabbit IgG H&L, 1:1000 (Invitrogen, Cat. No. A31573), BODIPY™ 493/503, 1:500 (Invitrogen, Cat. No. D3922), DAPI, 1:20 (Solarbio, Cat. No. C0065). Slices were imaged using an Airyscan 2 LSM 900 confocal microscope (ZEISS). Images were processed and analyzed using the Imaris software (Bitplane version 9.0.1).
Whole tissue immunostaining and optical clearing
Whole tissue optical clearing and immunostaining were performed following the previously published ImmuView method (Ding et al., 2019). Briefly, mice were anesthetized and perfused with PBS. The kidney and all surrounding adipose tissues (mPRAT and lPRAT) were collected and fixed in PBS containing 0.5% PFA and 10% sucrose at room temperature for 2 hours. After serial dehydration and rehydration in methanol of different concentrations, the tissues were permeabilized and blocked overnight using PBS containing 0.2% Triton X-100, 10% DMSO (Sigma Aldrich, Cat. No. D8418), 5% donkey serum and 10 mM EDTA-Na at room temperature, followed by immunolabelling with UCP1 primary antibody (1:100, Sigma Aldrich, Cat. No. U6382) in a PBS-based dilution buffer containing 0.2% Tween-20, 10 mg/mL heparin (Solarbio, Cat. No. H8060), 5% donkey serum and 10 mM EDTA-Na (pH 8.0) for three days at room temperature. Then, the tissues were washed with a washing buffer (PBS with 0.2% Tween-20, 10 mg/mL heparin and 10 mM EDTA-Na) for 12 hours at 37°C. Washing buffer was changed every 2 hours during the washing period. Alexa Fluor 555 rabbit IgG H&L secondary antibody (1:1000, Invitrogen, Cat. No. A31572) was used for primary antibody detection by incubation at room temperature for three days, followed by a 2-day-washing at 37°C with washing buffer being changed every 8 hours. For tissue clearing, the immunolabeled tissues were embedded in 0.8% agarose and incubated at room temperature with increasing concentrations of methanol. The tissue blocks were then incubated at room temperature with a mixture of dichloromethane and methanol (2:1) for 4 hours, followed by incubation in 100% dichloromethane for 1.5 hours. The tissue blocks were finally incubated at room temperature with 100% dibenzyl ether (DBE) for 24 hours. All incubation steps were performed with gentle shaking.
Samples were imaged with an Ultramicroscope II light-sheet microscope (LaVision Biotec) equipped with a sCMOs camera (Andor Neo). Images were acquired with the ImspectorPro software (LaVision BioTec). Samples were placed in an imaging reservoir filled with DBE and illuminated from the side by the laser light sheet. The samples were scanned with the 640-nm laser, with a step-size of 3 μm for 4X objectives. Images were processed using the Imaris software (Bitplane version 9.0.1).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism version 8.0.0. Results were presented as mean ± standard deviation (SD). One-way or two-way ANOVA was used to test statistical significance for qPCR, western blot and immunofluorescence quantification as specified in the corresponding figure legends. The level of statistical significance was assigned as * for P <0.05, ** for P<0.01, *** for P<0.001, **** for P<0.0001.
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