Summary: | Summary: Adipocytes, once considered simple lipid-storing cells, are rapidly emerging as complex cells with many biologically diverse functions. A powerful high-throughput method for analyzing single cells is flow cytometry. Several groups have attempted to analyze and sort freshly isolated adipocytes; however, using an adipocyte-specific reporter mouse, we demonstrate that these studies fail to detect the majority of white adipocytes. We define critical settings required for adipocyte flow cytometry and provide a rigid strategy for analyzing and sorting white and brown adipocyte populations. The applicability of our protocol is shown by sorting mouse adipocytes based on size or UCP1 expression and demonstrating that a subset of human adipocytes lacks the β2-adrenergic receptor, particularly in the insulin-resistant state. In conclusion, the present study confers key technological insights for analyzing and sorting mature adipocytes, opening up numerous downstream research applications. : Freshly isolated adipocytes are a notoriously difficult cell type to study. Hagberg et al. provide a detailed flow cytometry protocol for the analysis and sorting of mouse and human adipocytes by defining the critical factors and conditions required for studying this specialized cell type and pinpointing common pitfalls. Keywords: adipocyte, adipose tissue, flow cytometry, FACS, mouse, human, uncoupled protein 1, beta 2 adrenergic receptor
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