Integrated single-cell RNA-seq and bulk RNA-seq analysis to investigate key adipogenesis genes in adipose-derived stem cells.
Tongtong Zhang, Zhongming Cai, Haoran Li, Zhengyao Li, Leijuan Gan, Dali Mu
Abstract
Open AccessAdipogenic differentiation of adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) is fundamental to both adipose tissue homeostasis and clinical applications, particularly fat grafting. However, the global and stage-specific transcriptional regulatory networks underlying ADSC adipogenesis remain incompletely elucidated. In this study, we integrated bulk and single-cell RNA-seq datasets across multiple time points of ADSC adipogenesis to identify core regulators of differentiation and maturation. A total of 41 genes were consistently upregulated during early differentiation, among which eight hub genes (FABP4, FASN, FABP5, ADIPOQ, PLIN1, LPL, CIDEC, and ACSL1) formed a tightly connected protein-protein interaction (PPI) module associated with lipid metabolism, lipid droplet formation, and adipocyte maturation. Further integration of differentially expressed lncRNAs and miRNAs led to the construction of a ceRNA network involving 7 mRNAs, 9 miRNAs, and 4 lncRNAs, comprising 34 predicted lncRNA-miRNA-mRNA regulatory axes. To identify temporal transcriptional regulators, we defined five genes (TTC14, MBNL2, UBR3, ABCD2, and SORT1) as early-stage inducers of adipogenesis, and four genes (UQCR11, NDUFB4, S100A10, and PRDX3) as late-stage regulators involved in maintaining the mature phenotype. These stage-specific regulators showed distinct temporal expression patterns and were validated by qPCR. GeneMANIA network analysis further revealed that early-stage regulators were enriched in lipid transport and lipase activity regulation, while late-stage regulators were associated with mitochondrial electron transport and energy metabolism. These findings highlight the stage-dependent transcriptional landscape of ADSC adipogenesis and provide candidate regulatory targets for modulating adipocyte differentiation and stability.