Single-cell omics for nutrition research: an emerging opportunity for human-centric investigations
Article 2025 en
Authors
MC
Manuela Cassotta
YD
Yasmany Armas Díaz
DC
Danila Cianciosi
Abstract
1 min read
Understanding how dietary compounds affect human health is challenged by their molecular complexity and cell-type-specific effects. Conventional multi-cell type (bulk) analyses obscure cellular heterogeneity, while animal and standard <i>in vitro</i> models often fail to replicate human physiology. Single-cell omics technologies-such as single-cell RNA sequencing, as well as single-cell-resolved proteomic and metabolomic approaches-enable high-resolution investigation of nutrient-cell interactions and reveal mechanisms at a single-cell resolution. When combined with advanced human-derived <i>in vitro</i> systems like organoids and organ-on-chip platforms, they support mechanistic studies in physiologically relevant contexts. This review outlines emerging applications of single-cell omics in nutrition research, emphasizing their potential to uncover cell-specific dietary responses, identify nutrient-sensitive pathways, and capture interindividual variability. It also discusses key challenges-including technical limitations, model selection, and institutional biases-and identifies strategic directions to facilitate broader adoption in the field. Collectively, single-cell omics offer a transformative framework to advance human-centric nutrition research.
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