bims-obesme Biomed News
on Obesity metabolism
Issue of 2026–03–29
eight papers selected by
Xiong Weng, University of Edinburgh



  1. Nat Commun. 2026 Mar 25. pii: 2445. [Epub ahead of print]17(1):
      Brown adipose tissue is an evolutionary innovation in placental mammals that regulates body temperature through adaptive thermogenesis. Cold exposure activates brown adipose tissue thermogenesis through coordinated induction of brown adipogenesis, angiogenesis, and sympathetic innervation; however, how these processes are coordinated remains unclear. Here, we show that fragments of Slit guidance ligand 3 (SLIT3) drive crosstalk among adipocyte progenitors, endothelial cells, and sympathetic nerves. Adipocyte progenitors secrete SLIT3, which is cleaved into functionally distinct SLIT3-N and SLIT3-C fragments that independently promote angiogenesis and sympathetic innervation. We identify PLXNA1 as a receptor for SLIT3-C and demonstrate its essential role in sympathetic innervation of brown adipose tissue. Moreover, we identify BMP1 as the first SLIT protease described in vertebrates. Coordinated neurovascular expansion mediated by distinct SLIT3 fragments provides a bifurcated yet integrated mechanism that ensures a synchronized brown adipose tissue response to environmental challenges. Finally, this study reveals a previously unrecognized role for adipocyte progenitors in regulating tissue innervation.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70310-9
  2. Nat Genet. 2026 Mar 25.
      Sequencing the human genome came with the promise of refined risk assessment for heritable diseases, drug responses and other applications of personalized genomics. Genome-wide association studies that linked thousands of genetic alterations to heritable disorders have partially delivered on this promise. However, many patients with rare diseases remain undiagnosed after genome sequencing, in part because conventional sequencing studies struggle to characterize and phase all genomic variation. Chromosome-length phasing, enabled by the single-cell Strand-seq technique in combination with long-read data, has done much to improve the situation. For example, new diploid assembly analyses for personal genomes allow nearly complete descriptions of genomic variation. Moreover, a new Strand-seq-based phasing method can leverage DNA methylation to assign genetic variants not just to haplotypes but to maternally or paternally inherited homologous chromosomes, representing a new frontier in personalized genomics. Here we review the principles and application of Strand-seq, a key enabler of these developments.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-026-02548-4
  3. EMBO Rep. 2026 Mar 26.
      YAP1 signaling is essential for development but its specific roles in early embryogenesis remain poorly understood. To shed light on this, we analyze YAP1's role in regulating the pluripotency of the mammalian epiblast, using scRNAseq approaches. Conditional deletion of Yap1 in the mouse epiblast (Sox2-Cre) alters the expression of signaling genes, including Nodal, Wnt3, and Fgf8. Accordingly, Yap1 loss leads to enhanced differentiation of the epiblast toward primitive streak lineages, as evidenced by the upregulation of T/Brachyury and Eomes genes. A proximity labeling assay in human pluripotent stem cells, followed by biochemical assays and molecular modeling predictions, reveals that YAP1 cooperates with QSER1 protein to regulate lineage genes. Our analysis shows that YAP1:TEAD4 enhancers recruit QSER1 to prevent RNA Polymerase II recruitment. QSER1 depletion, similar to YAP1, increases NODAL gene expression and leads to hyperactive NODAL signaling during human embryonic stem cells differentiation. Overall, our findings define a role of YAP1 in the epiblast in vivo and uncover an interplay with QSER1 controlling the activity of developmental signaling pathways in pluripotent cells.
    Keywords:  Epiblast; Nodal Signaling; Pluripotency; QSER1; YAP1
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s44319-026-00746-z
  4. Nat Commun. 2026 Mar 23.
      The liver is a central organ controlling lipid and cholesterol metabolism and plays a key role in regulating lipoprotein profiles and cardiovascular disease risk. Males and females show clear differences in cholesterol handling and susceptibility to atherosclerosis, but the molecular basis for these sex-specific effects remains incompletely understood. Here we show that the X-linked histone demethylase 6 A (KDM6A) is essential for maintaining healthy cholesterol metabolism in the liver. Reducing KDM6A levels in human liver cells  from females but not males disrupts gene programs involved in lipoprotein regulation linked to cardiovascular disorders. Consistently, female mice lacking KDM6A specifically in hepatocytes develops pro-atherogenic blood lipoprotein profiles and increased atherosclerosis under genetic and dietary stress, whereas males are largely unaffected. Mechanistically, KDM6A cooperates with Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4 Alpha (HNF4A) to promote chromatin activation and enable CREBH (encoded by CREB3L3)-dependent transcription of lipid metabolic genes. These findings identify KDM6A as a sex-linked regulator of hepatic cholesterol metabolism.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70846-w
  5. Trends Genet. 2026 Mar 24. pii: S0168-9525(26)00032-6. [Epub ahead of print]
      Over the past decade, the rapid expansion of large-scale data and advances in computational power have allowed machine learning (ML), especially deep learning, to reshape many areas of biological research. Evolutionary genetics and molecular evolution are also poised for a similar transformation. In this review, we discuss key advances and ongoing challenges in applying ML to the study of genetics and evolution, and we highlight the potential of artificial intelligence to connect genotype, phenotype, and evolutionary history.
    Keywords:  artificial intelligence; deep learning; machine learning; molecular evolution; population genetics
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tig.2026.01.013
  6. Cell Res. 2026 Mar 25.
      Advances in transcriptomic technologies have progressively transformed the questions we can ask and answer about muscle stem cells (MuSCs) during aging. Early microarray and bulk RNA sequencing studies established foundational population-level signatures of aged MuSCs, including attenuation of myogenic and metabolic programs as well as induction of inflammatory and stress-associated transcription. However, these averaged readouts obscured cell-to-cell variability and rare functional states. The transition to single-cell and single-nucleus RNA sequencing marked a turning point by resolving MuSC heterogeneity and revealing that MuSC aging is not purely stochastic. Instead, aged MuSC pools show reproducible changes in state composition, delayed or altered myogenic lineage progression, and selective vulnerability of specific functional subsets. Emerging spatial transcriptomic approaches, although still limited by sensitivity and cell-type discrimination in muscle, are beginning to place these MuSC states into their native tissue context, directly linking transcriptional states, niche organization, and age-associated remodeling. In parallel, integrative multi-omic designs that pair transcriptomics with chromatin accessibility and metabolic measurements have strengthened mechanistic connections among age-associated gene programs, epigenetic remodeling, and metabolic state shifts. Finally, computational frameworks - including trajectory inference, dynamic modeling, and machine learning - are increasingly applied to high-dimensional transcriptomic data to predict aging trajectories and identify candidate rejuvenation targets. In this Perspective, we trace the evolution of transcriptomic technologies through the lens of MuSC aging and highlight how increasing resolution has reframed core models of MuSC decline and plasticity.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41422-026-01240-w
  7. J Clin Invest. 2026 Mar 24. pii: e200857. [Epub ahead of print]
      The lymphatic system plays a central role in lipid absorption by transporting triglyceride-rich particles called chylomicrons (CMs) from the small intestine to the systemic circulation. However, the molecular mechanism by which CMs get into the intestinal lymphatics is unknown. Here we demonstrated that GPR182, an atypical chemokine receptor in lymphatic endothelial cells, mediates dietary fat absorption. GPR182 knockout mice exhibit a selective increase in circulating high-density lipoproteins and are resistant to dietary-induced obesity. GPR182 ablation in mice leads to poor lipid absorption and thereby a delay in growth during development. GPR182 broadly interacts with and transports lipoproteins. Transmission electron microscopy analysis reveals that mechanistically, loss of GPR182 prevents CMs from entering the lacteal lumen of the small intestine. Consistent with this, GPR182 blockade with monoclonal antibodies protects mice from diet- induced obesity and treats existing obesity. Together, our study identifies GPR182 as a lipoprotein receptor that mediates dietary fat absorption and supports GPR182 blockade as a feasible approach to treat obesity and related disorders.
    Keywords:  Lipoproteins; Lymph; Metabolism; Obesity; Vascular biology
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI200857
  8. Nat Commun. 2026 Mar 27.
      The ability to accurately measure aberrant DNA methylation levels is integral to the understanding of DNA methylation biology. It is well-established that in cancer, the largest, and thus, most biologically important absolute gains of DNA methylation levels occur at CpG sites with low native levels while the largest losses occur at CpG sites with high native levels. Conventional wisdom assumes that the observed association between the degree of the alterations and the native levels are largely due to the limitations of change within the DNA methylation scale. Here, we present evidence that this association is largely caused by alterations occurring as a global rate of change relative to the native level. We show that DNA methylation alterations can be accurately compared by calculating the rate of change relative to the native level. Most importantly, this approach enables the identification of more biologically significant DNA methylation alterations.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-71089-5