- Hypertrophied human adipocyte spheroids as in vitro model of weight gain and adipose tissue dysfunction.
Hypertrophied human adipocyte spheroids as in vitro model of weight gain and adipose tissue dysfunction.
Adipocyte enlargement is a key feature of obesity and associated with insulin resistance and metabolic disease The cause and consequences of adipocyte enlargement have remained hard to study in vitro due to a lack of human cell models with representative morphology This paper provides an easily set up spheroid culture method, HUVAS (human unilocular vascularized adipocyte spheroids), for the differentiation and culturing of human adipocytes with a more unilocular morphology We show that providing adipocyte progenitors with a vascular differentiation niche is key for achieving in vitro differentiated adipocytes with large lipid droplets Lipid treatment of the HUVAS spheroids can further adipocyte enlargement and induce cellular dysfunction, mimicking the in vivo effects of weight gain The model will allow a wider research community to perform mechanistic studies of the factors impacting on human adipocyte differentiation and growth, increasing our understanding of how obesity develops and why it has such detrimental consequences on whole body metabolism ABSTRACT: The rise in obesity prevalence has created an urgent need for new and improved methods to study human adipocytes and the pathogenic effects of weight gain in vitro. Despite the proven advantage of culturing adipocyte progenitors as 3D structures, the majority of studies continue to use traditional 2D cultures which result in small, multilocular adipocytes with poor representability. We hypothesized that providing differentiating pre-adipocytes with a vascular growth niche would mimic in vivo adipogenesis and improve the differentiation into unilocular adipocytes. Here we present HUVAS (human unilocular vascularized adipocyte spheroids), a simple, easily applicable culture protocol that allows for the differentiation of human adipocytes with a more unilocular morphology and larger lipid droplets than previous protocols. Moreover, we offer a protocol for inducing adipocyte enlargement in vitro, resulting in larger lipid droplets and development of several key features of adipocyte dysfunction, including altered adipokine secretion, impaired lipolysis and insulin resistance. Taken together, our HUVAS model offers an improved culture system for studying the cellular and molecular mechanisms causing metabolic dysfunction and inflammation in human adipose tissue during weight gain.