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Lipid-Associated Macrophages Control Metabolic Homeostasis in a Trem2-Dependent Manner.

Citation
Jaitin, D. A., et al. “Lipid-Associated Macrophages Control Metabolic Homeostasis In A Trem2-Dependent Manner.”. Cell, pp. 686-698.e14.
Center University of Pennsylvania
Author Diego Adhemar Jaitin, Lorenz Adlung, Christoph A Thaiss, Assaf Weiner, Baoguo Li, Hélène Descamps, Patrick Lundgren, Camille Bleriot, Zhaoyuan Liu, Aleksandra Deczkowska, Hadas Keren-Shaul, Eyal David, Niv Zmora, Shai Meron Eldar, Nir Lubezky, Oren Shibolet, David A Hill, Mitchell A Lazar, Marco Colonna, Florent Ginhoux, Hagit Shapiro, Eran Elinav, Ido Amit
Keywords Alzheimer disease, Trem2 pathway, fatty liver diseases, immunology, macrophages, metabolic diseases, Metabolism, obesity, single-cell genomics, systems biology
Abstract

Immune cells residing in white adipose tissue have been highlighted as important factors contributing to the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases, but the molecular regulators that drive adipose tissue immune cell remodeling during obesity remain largely unknown. Using index and transcriptional single-cell sorting, we comprehensively map all adipose tissue immune populations in both mice and humans during obesity. We describe a novel and conserved Trem2 lipid-associated macrophage (LAM) subset and identify markers, spatial localization, origin, and functional pathways associated with these cells. Genetic ablation of Trem2 in mice globally inhibits the downstream molecular LAM program, leading to adipocyte hypertrophy as well as systemic hypercholesterolemia, body fat accumulation, and glucose intolerance. These findings identify Trem2 signaling as a major pathway by which macrophages respond to loss of tissue-level lipid homeostasis, highlighting Trem2 as a key sensor of metabolic pathologies across multiple tissues and a potential therapeutic target in metabolic diseases.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Cell
Volume
178
Issue
3
Number of Pages
686-698.e14
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2019.05.054
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
31257031
PMCID
PMC7068689
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