Adipose tissue is central to the regulation of energy balance. Two functionally different types of fat are present in mammals: white adipose tissue (WAT), the primary site of triglyceride storage, and brown adipose tissue (BAT), which is specialized in energy expenditure and can counteract obesity1. Factors that specify the developmental fate and function of white and brown adipose tissue remain poorly understood2,3. Here, we demonstrate that while some members of the family of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP) support white adipocyte differentiation, BMP-7 singularly promotes differentiation of brown preadipocytes even in the absence of the normally required hormonal induction cocktail. BMP-7 activates a full program of brown adipogenesis including induction of early regulators of brown fat fate PRDM164 and PGC-1 (PPARγ coactivator-1) α5, increased expression of brown fat defining marker uncoupling protein-1 (UCP-1) and adipogenic transcription factors peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)γ and CCAAT/enhancer-binding proteins (C/EBPs), and mitochondrial biogenesis via a p38 MAP kinase and PGC-1 dependent pathway. Moreover, BMP-7 triggers commitment of mesenchymal progenitor cells to a brown adipocyte lineage, and implantation of these cells into nude mice results in development of adipose tissue containing mostly brown adipocytes. BMP-7 knockout embryos show a marked paucity of brown fat and near complete absence of UCP-1 protein. Adenoviral-mediated expression of BMP-7 in mice results in a significant increase in brown, but not white, fat mass and leads to an increase in energy expenditure and reduced weight gain. These data reveal an important role of BMP-7 in promoting brown adipocyte differentiation and thermogenesis in vivo and in vitro, and provide a potential novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of obesity.
SUMMARY Lung stem cells are instructed to produce lineage-specific progeny through unknown factors in their microenvironment. We used clonal three-dimensional (3D) co-cultures of endothelial cells and distal lung stem cells, bronchioalveolar stem cells (BASCs), to probe the instructive mechanisms. Single BASCs had bronchiolar and alveolar differentiation potential in lung endothelial cell co-cultures. Gain and loss of function experiments showed BMP4-Bmpr1a signaling triggers calcineurin/NFATc1-dependent expression of Thrombospondin-1 (Tsp1) in lung endothelial cells to drive alveolar lineage-specific BASC differentiation. Tsp1-null mice exhibited defective alveolar injury repair, confirming a crucial role for the BMP4-NFATc1-TSP1 axis in lung epithelial differentiation and regeneration in vivo. Discovery of this pathway points to methods to direct the derivation of specific lung epithelial lineages from multipotent cells. These findings elucidate a pathway that may be a critical target in lung diseases and provide new tools to understand the mechanisms of respiratory diseases at the single cell level.
Brown fat is specialized for energy expenditure and has therefore been proposed to function as a defense against obesity. Despite recent advances in delineating the transcriptional regulation of brown adipocyte differentiation, cellular lineage specification and developmental cues specifying brown-fat cell fate remain poorly understood. In this study, we identify and isolate a subpopulation of adipogenic progenitors (Sca-1 + /CD45 − /Mac1 − ; referred to as Sca-1 + progenitor cells, ScaPCs) residing in murine brown fat, white fat, and skeletal muscle. ScaPCs derived from different tissues possess unique molecular expression signatures and adipogenic capacities. Importantly, although the ScaPCs from interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT) are constitutively committed brown-fat progenitors, Sca-1 + cells from skeletal muscle and subcutaneous white fat are highly inducible to differentiate into brown-like adipocytes upon stimulation with bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP7). Consistent with these findings, human preadipocytes isolated from subcutaneous white fat also exhibit the greatest inducible capacity to become brown adipocytes compared with cells isolated from mesenteric or omental white fat. When muscle-resident ScaPCs are re-engrafted into skeletal muscle of syngeneic mice, BMP7-treated ScaPCs efficiently develop into adipose tissue with brown fat-specific characteristics. Importantly, ScaPCs from obesity-resistant mice exhibit markedly higher thermogenic capacity compared with cells isolated from obesity-prone mice. These data establish the molecular characteristics of tissue-resident adipose progenitors and demonstrate a dynamic interplay between these progenitors and inductive signals that act in concert to specify brown adipocyte development.
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