Glucose Controls Morphodynamics of LPS-Stimulated
Macrophages
Gerda Venter, Frank T. J. J. Oerlemans, Mietske Wijers, Marieke Willemse, Jack A. M. Fransen,
Bé Wieringa*
Department of Cell Biology, Nijmegen Centre for Molecular Life Sciences, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Abstract
Macrophages constantly undergo morphological changes when quiescently surveying the tissue milieu for signs of
microbial infection or damage, or after activation when they are phagocytosing cellular debris or foreign material. These
morphofunctional alterations require active actin cytoskeleton remodeling and metabolic adaptation. Here we analyzed
RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO macrophages as models to study whether there is a specific association between aspects of
carbohydrate metabolism and actin-based processes in LPS-stimulated macrophages. We demonstrate that the capacity to
undergo LPS-induced cell shape changes and to phagocytose complement-opsonized zymosan (COZ) particles does not
depend on oxidative phosphorylation activity but is fueled by glycolysis. Different macrophage activities like spreading,
formation of cell protrusions, as well as phagocytosis of COZ, were thereby strongly reliant on the presence of low levels of
extracellular glucose. Since global ATP production was not affected by rewiring of glucose catabolism and inhibition of
glycolysis by 2-deoxy-D-glucose and glucose deprivation had differential effects, our observations suggest a non-metabolic
role for glucose in actin cytoskeletal remodeling in macrophages, e.g. via posttranslational modification of receptors or
signaling molecules, or other effects on the machinery that drives actin cytoskeletal changes. Our findings impute a decisive
role for the nutrient state of the tissue microenvironment in macrophage morphodynamics.
Citation: Venter G, Oerlemans FTJJ, Wijers M, Willemse M, Fransen JAM, et al. (2014) Glucose Controls Morphodynamics of LPS-Stimulated Macrophages. PLoS
ONE 9(5): e96786. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786
Editor: Pankaj K. Singh, University of Nebraska Medical Center, United States of America
Received December 5, 2013; Accepted April 11, 2014; Published May 5, 2014
Copyright: ß 2014 Venter et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: Radboud University Medical Centre. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the
manuscript.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
* E-mail:
[email protected]
hand, do not undergo such extensive metabolic change but have a
metabolic profile comparable to that of unstimulated cells, with
higher TCA-cycle and oxidative activity [5,8]. Recently,
Haschemi et al. [7] have shown that carbohydrate kinase-like
protein (CARKL) orchestrates macrophage activation through
metabolic control. CARKL overexpression drove cells towards an
oxidative state and sensitized macrophages towards a M2
polarization state, while CARKL-loss promoted a rerouting of
glucose from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism and induced a mild
M1 phenotype. Conversely, Tannahill et al. [9] have demonstrated that LPS stimulation of macrophages causes an increase in the
intracellular TCA-cycle intermediate succinate, which stabilizes
M1-associated HIF-1a and thereby regulates the expression of the
pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1b.
Besides overall metabolic versatility, macrophages also exhibit a
wide range of morphodynamic activities, needed to exert their
tasks in tissue surveillance and host defense. To control these
activities before and after polarization, macrophages continuously
form actin-rich membrane protrusions and extend filopodia from
their cell surface [10,11]. Changes in the organization of the actin
cytoskeleton thereby enable the cell to dynamically adapt its
morphology to suit its particular function and differentiation state.
For example, LPS induces polymerization of cytoskeletal actin
filaments, cell spreading, and the formation of filopodia, lamellipodia, and membrane ruffles in monocytes and macrophages
[12,13]. Likewise, IL-4, which is released during tissue injury,
Introduction
Macrophages are present in all tissues where they provide a first
line of defense against pathogens and help to maintain steady-state
tissue homeostasis by eliminating foreign matter and apoptotic
cells via phagocytosis [1,2]. To exert these functions they migrate
and constantly survey their immediate environment for signs of
tissue damage or presence of invading organisms [1]. During
surveillance, danger signals are detected through Toll-like
receptors (TLRs), intracellular pattern recognition receptors
(PRRs) and interleukin(IL)-receptors [2]. When macrophages
encounter stimuli like inflammatory cytokines (IFN-c, TNF, or
IL-4), foreign material (e.g. lipopolysaccharide; LPS), or immunoglobulin G (IgG) immune complexes, tissue-resident macrophages
become activated to undergo a phenotypic change towards a
classically activated M1 or alternatively activated (suppressive) M2
polarization state [1,3,4], which is accompanied by metabolic
adaptation. Because M1 and M2 phenotypes represent extremes
in a continuum of phenotypes that macrophages can adopt, we still
have no clear picture of the (possibly reciprocal) relationship
between their metabolic profile and activation state. The
prevailing idea is that, in the resting state, macrophages utilize
glucose at a high rate and convert 95% of it to lactate [5]. Upon
polarization towards a M1 phenotype (e.g. after stimulation with
LPS) glucose import via GLUT, as well as the glycolytic flux, is
even further upregulated [5–7]. M2 macrophages, on the other
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
causes the rearrangement of actin-rich podosomes to form rosettes
in M2 macrophages, enabling degradation of-and migration
through-dense extracellular matrices [14].
The rearrangements of cytoskeletal actin filaments that steer this
behavior comprise multiple steps, including the nucleation and
elongation of new filaments from ATP-bound G-actin monomers,
the addition of these monomers to the barbed ends of existing
filaments, the hydrolysis of actin-bound ATP within the growing
filament, and the dissociation of ADP-G-actin at the pointed end
[15–18]. ADP on liberated G-actin is substituted with ATP,
producing new ATP-G-actin monomers for incorporation. The
ensemble of activities in this complex process is regulated by more
than a hundred actin-associated proteins (ABPs), several of which
are influenced by the availability of ATP. Metabolism, specifically
the binding and hydrolysis of ATP and ATP-ADP exchange,
thereby not only dictates the behavior of the actin filaments
themselves [19–21], but also controls the activity of regulatory
factors like the Arp2/3 protein complex [22,23], or upstream
signaling such as the ROCK/Rho-GTPase pathway [24]. The
idea that actin remodeling is a major cellular energy drain is
corroborated by the observation that actin filaments are stabilized
under conditions of global ATP-depletion in order to prevent
ATP-hydrolysis within the filament and, thereby, ATP-consumption [25,26].
Besides ATP availability [27,28], intracellular pH and
NAD(P)+/NAD(P)H ratio are other key metabolic parameters
that influence actin network dynamics and cell motility [29], either
by modifying actin itself [30–32] or by regulating the activity of
proteins such as the actin depolymerizing factor cofilin, mical, and
the actin severing protein gelsolin [33–35]. In most mammalian
cells, production of ATP, NAD+/NADH, and H+ is dominated by
carbohydrate catabolism via glycolysis and mitochondrial TCA
cycle/oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) pathways. Importantly, various glycolytic pathway enzymes that handle these
metabolites/cofactors appear compartmentalized and are found
associated with the actin cytoskeleton and with actin dependent
cellular structures, such as pseudopodia, membrane ruffles, and
lamellipodia [36–39]. Indeed, this coupling helps to explain the
dependency of cell motility on glycolysis [40,41]. Also phagocytosis
by macrophages depends on glycolysis [42–44], but not much
work has been done to study this association in detail. Seeing their
vital role in host defense and maintenance of tissue homeostasis
and their surprising versatility in adaptation of functioning in
many different tissue environments, we wondered whether there is
a link between the activation of glucose metabolism and the extent
of morphodynamic change that macrophages undergo. To
apprehend the coupling between actin cytoskeletal remodeling
and metabolic state we here investigated the ability of LPSstimulated (M1) RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO macrophages to
maintain functional activity under conditions where they were
forced to shift between a (anaerobic) glycolytic or oxidative
metabolism. RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO cell lines were chosen
because they are in vitro manipulable models that have retained
marked plasticity to stimulus-directed polarized activation, but
lack the phenotypic heterogeneity that is characteristic for primary
macrophages [45,46]. We report on a stringent dependency of
morphodynamics of LPS-stimulated macrophages upon sufficient
glucose supply.
Cell Culture
RAW 264.7 cells (kind gift from Dr. Hong-Hee Kim,
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, School of
Dentistry, Seoul National University, Korea; [47]) were maintained in high-glucose DMEM (Gibco, Life Technologies, Paisley,
UK) supplemented with 10% heat inactivated FBS (PAA
laboratories, Pasching, Austria), 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and
4 mMGlutaMAX (Gibco, Life Technologies, Paisley, UK), at
37uC in a humidified atmosphere with 7.5% CO2. Maf-DKO cells
(kind gift from Dr. Michael H. Sieweke, Centre d’Immunologie de
Marseille-Luminy (CIML), Université Aix-Marseille, France; [46])
were maintained in the same way except that medium was
supplemented with 20% conditioned medium from L929-cells
containing macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF).
DNA Constructs and Transfection
Plasmid pEYFP-N1-DATG-Lifeact was constructed as follows:
Lifeact [48] cDNA, containing human codon sequences flanked by
a 59 BglII and 39 EcoRI restriction site, was commercially
synthesized and ligated in a pUC57 plasmid by GenScript USA
Inc. A forward primer (59-CT CAG ATC TCC ACC ATG GGC
GTG GCC GAC C-39) was designed to introduce a BglII site and
a Kozak sequence in front of the Lifeact start codon. Use of this
primer together with the M13 universal reverse primer enabled
amplification of the Lifeact encoding insert from pUC57 by PCR.
PCR products were digested with BglII and EcoRI and ligated
into pEYFP-N1-DATG plasmid DNA (pEYFP-N1 from Clontech
with ATG on position 679 mutated to GCG).
For transfection, RAW 264.7 cells were seeded in 6 well plates
at 300,000 cells/well and incubated overnight. Plasmid pEYFPN1-DATG-Lifeact DNA (12 mg; linearized with AseI) was diluted
in 1 ml serum-free DMEM and incubated for 20 minutes at 37uC
with 24 ml Targefect-RAW transfection reagent (Targeting
Systems, El Cajon, CA, USA). Transfection complexes (250 ml)
were added to wells containing 2 ml fresh culture medium and
incubated for 4 hours at 37uC after which medium was refreshed.
A stable cell pool was established by culturing cells for two weeks
in medium containing 500 mg/ml G418, followed by limited
dilution cloning.
Media for Metabolic Manipulation
For cell culture under glucose free conditions, glucose-free
DMEM (Gibco, Life Technologies, Paisley, UK) was supplemented with 10 mM galactose. As control, medium supplemented with
25 mM glucose was used. Low glucose medium was prepared by
supplementing glucose free DMEM with 1 mM glucose and
10 mM galactose (gluc/gal). Media were further supplemented
with 10% heat inactivated dialyzed FBS, 1 mM sodium pyruvate,
and 4 mM GlutaMAX. For inhibition of glycolysis, high (25 mM)
glucose DMEM containing 10 mM 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG),
10% heat inactivated FBS, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and
4 mMGlutaMAX was used. Inhibition of OXPHOS was achieved
by adding 2.5 mM oligomycin to normal culture medium
(containing 25 mM glucose). For live imaging, phenol red-free
media were prepared using DMEM Base powder from SigmaAldrich to which sodium bicarbonate, GlutaMAX, sodium
pyruvate, glucose and/or galactose, 2-DG, or oligomycin were
added.
Materials and Methods
Proliferation Assay
Reagents
For cell proliferation analysis, the protocol developed by Skehan
et al. [49] was used. RAW 264.7 cells were seeded in four 96-well
plates (30,000 cells/well) in 100 ml culture medium and incubated
All reagents were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO,
USA), unless stated otherwise.
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for eight hours. At T0, plates were washed once and the medium
in plates T6, T15, and T24 was replaced with either control,
galactose, gluc/gal, 2-DG, or oligomycin medium containing
100 ng/ml LPS, while plate T0 was fixed for sulforhodamine B
(SRB) staining of protein content. After 0, 6, 15, and 24 hours,
cells were washed twice with cold PBS and fixed with 10%
trichloroacetic acid (TCA; J.T.Baker, Deventer, Holland) for 1
hour at 4uC. After fixation, plates were washed five times with
water and stored at 220uC until all plates were collected. Cellular
protein was stained with 50 ml 0.5% SRB in 1% acetic acid for
20 minutes after which wells were washed four times with 1%
acetic acid. Plates were dried at 60uC for 3 hours, protein was
dissolved in 150 ml 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 10.5), and the absorbance of each well was measured at 510 nm on a BioRad
Benchmark Plus micro plate reader. Values were corrected for
background SRB staining by subtracting the average absorbance
value of wells that contained medium only, from that of wells with
cells.
Otherwise, the kit protocol was followed as described by the
manufacturer. Lactate production was measured using the same
protocol as for glucose consumption but replacing glucose oxidase
with lactate oxidase and including a lactate standard series instead
of glucose. RAW 264.7 cells were seeded in 12 well tissue culture
plates and incubated for 6 or 24 hours in either 1 ml control or
1 ml 2.5 mM oligomycin medium. For glucose measurements,
medium containing 5 mM glucose was used while lactate
production was measured for cells grown in 25 mM glucose
medium. For measurement of glucose consumption or lactate
production during the last 6 hours of the 24 hour incubation
period, medium was refreshed after 18 hours in one of the 24 hour
plates. Prior to addition of incubation media, wells were always
rinsed with pure DMEM containing no glucose. Medium was
collected at the end of the 6 or 24 hour incubation period and
supernatants were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at 2
20uC until analysis. Cytosolic extracts were prepared in lysis buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, and
0.5% NP-40; 4uC) and total protein was determined with the
Bradford assay. Glucose consumption was calculated by subtracting the amount of glucose in the sample from that in medium
without cells. Lactate production was calculated by subtracting the
concentration of any lactate in the medium without cells from that
of the samples. Glucose and lactate assays were performed in
parallel.
Apoptosis Assay
Apoptosis of RAW 264.7 cells was measured using a biosensor
(pSIVA) developed by Kim et al. [50] (generous gift from Dr. Ralf
Langen, University of Southern California). Briefly, cells (20,000/
well) were seeded in a BD Falcon 96-well imaging plate and
incubated overnight. On the day of assay, wells were washed once
and medium was replaced with phenol red-free control, galactose,
2-DG, or oligomycin medium containing 8 ng/ml pSIVA or nonlabeled control. The plate was immediately imaged for 24 hours,
continuously, on a BD Pathway high-content spinning disc
confocal microscope equipped with a temperature and CO2
controllable incubation chamber, using a 20x objective and 262
montage capture. Three wells were imaged per condition and the
amount of apoptosis was determined by analyzing the increase in
GFP-signal. For each well the threshold of the whole GFP-image
series was adjusted and the total pixel area/frame was determined
using Fiji imaging software [51] and plotted against time.
Oxygen Consumption Measurements
Mitochondrial respiration was assessed by measuring oxygen
consumption on an Oroboros Oxygraph-2k respirometer according to a standard protocol provided by the manufacturer. RAW
264.7 and Maf-DKO cells were analyzed in parallel in two
separate chambers of the respirometer. After air calibration of
medium in the chambers and stabilization of the signal, 16106
cells (in 60 ml medium) were injected into the respective chambers.
Basal respiration rate was measured at the point where the O2-flux
signal stabilized. Oligomycin (2.5 mM) was added to each chamber
and the leak respiration rate was determined after stabilization of
the signal. Next, 7 mM carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP, a mitochondrial uncoupler) was added to
reach maximal oxygen consumption in the cells. Finally, 30 nM
rotenone was added and after stabilization of the system, the
residual oxygen consumption could be determined. The data were
analyzed using the DatLab software provided with the instrument.
ATP Assay
Intracellular ATP was determined using the CellTiter-Glo cell
viability assay kit from Promega.
500,000 cells (RAW 264.7) were seeded per well of a 6-well
plate and incubated in control medium, galactose medium or
1 mM glucose medium for 4 and 14 hours, 2-DG medium for 1
and 3 hours, or oligomycin-containing medium for 0.5 or 24 hours
prior to assay. Cells were washed twice with ice cold PBS and then
scraped in 350 ml ice cold 0.6 M perchloric acid (PCA). PCA
extracts were centrifuged for 3 minutes at 4000 rpm and 4uC to
pellet all cellular protein. Supernatants were neutralized with 140–
155 ml 2 M KOH/0.2 M KH2PO4, pH 7.5 and diluted 1:10 in
water. Per well, 100 ml diluted PCA extract was added to 100 ml
CellTiter-Glo reagent and the luminescence intensity per well was
measured on a LUMIstar OPTIMA microplate luminometer. The
ATP concentration was determined using an ATP standard series.
For determination of total cellular protein, pellets were dissolved in
250 ml 1 M NaOH and heated for 30 minutes at 95uC. Protein
concentration was then measured in 1:50 diluted NaOH extracts.
Cellular Actin Staining
RAW 264.7 cells on coverslips were pre-incubated in control or
2-DG medium (3 hours), gluc/gal medium (4 and 24 hours),
galactose medium (4 and 24 hours), or oligomycin-containing
medium (0.5 and 24 hours) and stimulated with 100 ng/ml LPS
overnight or left unstimulated. Medium was removed and cells
were immediately fixed in 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.2 M sodium
phosphate buffer for 30 minutes. Coverslips were washed twice
with PBS and twice with PBS containing 20 mM glycine (MP
Biomedicals, Illkirch Cedex, France; PBS-G) before permeabilization with 0.1% saponine/PBS-G for 20 minutes. This was
followed by actin staining with Alexa 568-labeled phalloidin
(1:600 in 0.1% saponine/PBS-G) for 1 hour. Cells were
successively washed four times for 2–4 minutes with 0.1%
saponine/PBS-G and once with PBS alone. Coverslips were
removed from wells, rinsed once in water, air dried, and imbedded
in MoWiol on microscope slides. Z-scans consisting of 2560.5 mm
sections and the pinhole adjusted to one airy unit were recorded
on a Zeiss LSM510 META confocal laser scanning microscope
and merged to one single image using Fiji imaging software.
Glucose and Lactate Assays
Glucose consumption measurements were based on the Amplex
Red Glucose/Glucose Oxidase assay kit from Molecular probes
(Life Technologies, Eugene, Oregon, USA). Glucose, glucose
oxidase, and Amplex Red reagent were used from the kit but
horseradish peroxidase was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich and 1x
reaction buffer was replaced with 0.05 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.5.
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Coverslips were prepared in duplo and per condition twelve
different fields were analyzed.
Phagocytosis Assay
Phagocytic activity was determined as zymosan ingestion
capacity essentially as described by Kuiper et al. [27]. Zymosan
particles were dissolved in PBS at 10 mg/ml and left to rehydrate
for at least one hour. Next, zymosan was sonicated three times for
5 seconds, spun down, resuspended in sodium carbonate buffer
(pH 9.6), sonicated, and incubated with 1 mg/ml fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC) for 1 hour at room temperature, in the
dark. After FITC labeling, zymosan was washed three times with
sodium carbonate buffer and incubated in 1 M Tris HCl, pH 8.0,
for 30 minutes. Zymosan was then washed twice with PBS and
finally resuspended in PBS. After one more sonication step, FITClabeled zymosan was divided in aliquots, frozen in liquid nitrogen,
and stored at 220uC.
Phagocytosis assays were performed in 12-well plates in which
cells were seeded the day before. The number of cells seeded was
adjusted for some conditions, due to the inhibitory effect on
proliferation. To compensate for reduced proliferation rate,
150,000 and 200,000 RAW 264.7 cells were seeded per well for
14 h and 24 h galactose treatment, respectively. For all other
conditions 100,000 RAW 264.7 cells were seeded per well. For
assays with Maf-DKO cells, 200,000 cells were seeded per well.
Prior to assay, cells were pre-incubated in control or galactose
medium (0, 4, and 14 hours), 2-DG medium (0, 1, and 3 hours),
oligomycin medium (0, 0.5, 3, 15, and 24 hours), or gluc/gal
medium (0, 4, and 14 hours), and activated overnight with
100 ng/ml LPS. For assays with Maf-DKO cells in galactose
medium, L929-cell conditioned medium was omitted to ensure
that no glucose was present in the medium. FITC-labeled
zymosan particles were opsonized by incubation in fetal bovine
serum for 1 hour at 37uC, washed twice with PBS, and finally
resuspended in serum-free control, galactose-, 2-DG-, oligomycin-,
or gluc/gal-medium. Cells were washed once with glucose-free
DMEM and incubated with 1 ml zymosan suspension for
30 minutes at 37uC. The particle-to-cell ratio was approximately
10:1. Particle engulfment was terminated after washing cells twice
with PBS and removing extracellular zymosan by treatment with
500 ml 100 U/ml lyticase for 10 minutes at room temperature.
Successively, cells were detached with 0.05% trypsin/0.5 mM
EDTA (Gibco, Life Technologies, Paisley, UK), resuspended in
1 ml medium with serum, pelleted, and finally resuspended in
200 ml 1% paraformaldehyde in PBS. Samples were analyzed by
FACS (BD FACS Calibur) and phagocytosis activity was
determined by measuring the percentage of FITC positive cells
and the fluorescence intensity in these cells. The phagocytic index
of each sample was then calculated as the product of the mean
FITC intensity of the positive population times the % of FITC
positive cells.
For the glucose rescue assay, 100,000 Maf-DKO and 60,000
RAW 264.7 cells were seeded per well in 24 well plates in medium
containing 20% L929 cell conditioned medium and stimulated
with 100 ng/ml LPS overnight. Cells were washed with glucosefree DMEM and incubated with FITC-COZ in galactose medium
for 30 minutes at 37uC. Then, 1 mM glucose or glucose-free
DMEM was added and the cells were incubated for another
30 minutes. Thereafter, cells were detached and prepared for
FACS.
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Cells were seeded on 12 mm glass coverslips in 24-well plates
and pre-incubated in control or galactose medium (4 hours), 2-DG
medium (3 hours), oligomycin medium (0.5 and 24 hours), or
gluc/gal medium (4 hours). In addition, cells were stimulated with
100 ng/ml LPS or left unstimulated. Cells were washed once with
PBS and fixed with 2% glutarealdehyde in 0.1 M sodium
cacodylate buffer for 1 hour. After washing cells twice with
sodium cacodylate buffer, coverslips were stored in this buffer at
4uC until further fixation with 1% OsO4 (osmium tetroxide) for
30 minutes. Coverslips were then washed once with water and
dehydrated in a graded series of alcohol washes. Finally, coverslips
were critical point dried and mounted for scanning electron
microscopy on a JEOL SEM6340F Field Emission Scanning
Electron microscope. Coverslips were prepared in duplo and per
condition 8–10 different fields were analyzed.
Quantification of Filopodia and Cell Circumference
For quantification of filopodia, fluorescence microscopy or SEM
images of fixed cells were analyzed. Lines were drawn to delineate
contour segments of cells in areas where no contacts with
neighboring cells were seen. The length and number of filopodia
extending from each contour segment were determined. For
phalloidin stained cells, 30–40 different line segments with a total
contour length corresponding to the circumference of 20–50 cells,
were included per condition. From the SEM images 20–26 line
segments, with a total contour length corresponding to the
circumference of 10–17 cells, were analyzed per condition.
To compare circumferences of whole cells, contour lengths of
circular lines around individual cells were measured. Per
condition, 20–50 cells were analyzed from both the fluorescence
and electron microscopy image collection.
Spreading Assay
RAW 264.7 cells expressing Lifeact-EYFP were stimulated with
100 ng/ml LPS overnight and simultaneously pre-incubated in
control or galactose, 2-DG, oligomycin, or gluc/gal medium for 0,
3, 15, or 24 hours before they were harvested by treatment with
1 mM EDTA/PBS (10 min at 37uC). After washing, the cells were
suspended in medium with 1% bovine serum albumin. A recovery
period of 20 minutes at 37uC was allowed before cells were seeded
in a fibronectin coated (50 mg/ml for 2 h at 37uC) BD Falcon 96well imaging plate at 4,000 cells/well in the presence of 100 ng/ml
LPS. Cell spreading was monitored for three hours by recording
the increase in EYFP-pixel area per cell (20 cells/well) on a BD
Pathway high-content spinning disc confocal microscope, using a
20x objective and 363 montage capture. In order to combine the
data from three independent experiments (performed in duplicate), the time axes had to be synchronized. To achieve this, a
Boltzmann simulation curve was produced for each data set
between time points 0 and 200 in steps of 2 minutes using
OriginLab data analysis and graphing software (OriginPro 6.1).
Data sets were then combined and analyzed for statistical
significance by applying a repeated measures analysis using
PASW statistics 18 SPSS software. Three time frames (consisting
of 30 data points each) of each curve were compared with the
corresponding three time frames of the control curve.
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Adhesion and Internalization Assay
Internalization efficiency was determined essentially as described by Sahlin et al (1983). RAW 264.7 cells and zymosan
particles were prepared as for the phagocytosis assay. Preincubation in different media without or with inhibitors was as
follows: galactose 0 hours; 2-DG, 1 hour; oligomycin, 0 and 24
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
dependent on both glycolysis and mitochondrial activity, but that
viability is better preserved by glycolysis alone than by mitochondrial TCA/OXPHOS activity alone.
hours; and gluc/gal, 0 hours. After 30 minute incubation with
serum opsonized zymosan at 37uC, plates were transferred to ice
and wells were washed twice with ice cold PBS. Cells were then
scraped in 1 ml cold medium, divided in two equal portions,
transferred to microcentrifuge tubes, and spun down. Cells in one
portion were resuspended in 0.05% trypan blue in potassium
dihydrogen citrate/saline, pH 4.4 to quench all extracellular
FITC-COZ, and cells in the other portion were taken up in the
same buffer but without trypan blue. Samples were analyzed by
FACS.
ATP Metabolism during Metabolic Inhibition of RAW
264.7 Cells
Since macrophages produce cellular ATP mainly via glycolysis
[52,53], inhibition of this pathway or limitation of its starting
substrate glucose may have a significant impact on cellular energy
homeostasis if there is no adequate compensation by mitochondrial ATP production. To study whether macrophages are
versatile enough to accommodate changes in ATP supply
pathways, we first followed [ATP] in RAW 264.7 cells during
early stages and modes of inhibition, under conditions where cells
were still fully viable (1 hour oligomycin and 2-DG, 4 hours
galactose). Comparison was drawn to [ATP] found at later stages
of inhibition when either apoptosis was initiated (3 hours 2-DG
and 14 hours galactose) or proliferation was significantly reduced
(24 hours oligomycin). Compared to control cells, short term
oligomycin treatment (3 h) did not affect ATP level. Upon
prolonged incubation in presence of oligomycin (24 h) we even
did not observe the 50% drop in ATP level that occurred in RAW
264.7 cells, presumably as a result of medium depletion. We
currently explain this observation by assuming that continuous
presence of oligomycin forces rewiring of (mitochondrial) metabolism and that this protects against this depletion. More study is
needed to obtain the evidence to support this explanation. In the
presence of 2-DG, cells managed to maintain ATP levels beyond
the 3 hours before apoptosis was induced (Figure 2B). Also in the
presence of galactose, i.e. under conditions of glucose deprivation,
no marked decrease in cellular ATP was observed until 14 hours,
compared to control cells (Figure 2C).
Under conditions where carbohydrate catabolism had to be
rewired, i.e. under oligomycin treatment, we observed a trend
towards higher glucose consumption by treated compared to
control cells, although the difference was not statistically significant
(Figure 2D). Oligomycin treatment did not, however, increase the
flux of glucose to lactate (Figure 2E). Normally, already about 95%
of all glucose consumed is converted into lactate and only a very
small fraction of pyruvate is imported into the mitochondria in
macrophages [5]. This explains why inhibition of OXPHOS
cannot cause a significant increase in the turnover of pyruvate to
lactate and why no significant increase in lactate production was
observed.
Statistical Analysis
Data were analyzed either with the Student’s t-test, one-sample
t-test for relative values, or using a two-way ANOVA and the
Bonferroni post-test (GraphPad software, Inc., Version 4). All
values are expressed as mean+/2SEM. Values were considered to
be significantly different when p values were ,0.05.
Results
The Effect of Glycolysis and OXPHOS Inhibition on RAW
264.7 Cell Proliferation and Viability
Tissue-resident macrophages, dependent on the niche that is
occupied within the body, may become exposed to dramatically
different nutrient conditions, including variation in oxygen and
carbohydrate supply. Their functional plasticity relies thereby
largely on the capacity to adapt and switch between carbohydrate
metabolism via glycolysis or mitochondrial TCA cycle and
OXPHOS reactions. For study of different aspects of this coupling
we chose to focus on the well-established macrophage model,
RAW 264.7 [45], and used another macrophage model, MafDKO cells [46], for comparison of the key findings. In order to
find a range of conditions wherein the metabolic state of RAW
264.7 macrophages can be manipulated without compromising
cell proliferation and viability, we monitored cells for a period of at
least 24 hours in the presence of the complex V OXPHOS
inhibitor oligomycin, the competitive glycolysis inhibitor 2-deoxyD-glucose (2-DG), or in the absence of glucose. Cell proliferation
was determined as the increase in total protein mass both in the
absence and presence of LPS. Since the effect of metabolic
inhibitors on cell proliferation appeared independent of this
stimulation, we chose to present only results obtained in the
presence of LPS (Figure 1A–C). Cell viability was monitored using
the the pSIVA apoptosis biosensor with switchable fluorescence
states (Figure 1D). When pSIVA binds to annexin V that is
exposed on the surface of early apoptotic cells its fluorescence can
be detected at an emission wavelength between 500 and 550 nm.
In the absence of apoptotic cells, pSIVA remains unbound and is
non-fluorescent and non-detectable, therefore, an increase in the
pSIVA fluorescence signal (plotted as pSIVA pixel area on the yaxis in Figure 1D) correlates with an increase in the amount of
apoptotic cells.
Incubation with 2.5 mM oligomycin caused a 60–70% inhibition of OXPHOS activity (measured as the decrease in O2consumption, Figure S1) and a marked reduction in proliferation
rate (Figure 1A) without inducing excessive apoptosis (Figure 1D).
Inhibition of glycolysis with 10 mM 2-DG induced apoptosis at an
early time point (i.e. after 3–4 hours) in a relatively small % of cells
in the population and, under this condition, proliferation ceased
(Figure 1B and 1D). Upon substitution of glucose with 10 mM
galactose (glucose deprivation) apoptotic cells began to appear
after about 10 hours (Figure 1D), in a pool of cells with already
significantly reduced proliferation capacity (Figure 1C). These
results imply that the proliferation of RAW 264.7 cells is
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Deviant Actin Cytoskeleton and Cell Surface Morphology
of M1 Macrophages in the Absence of Glucose
Polarization of macrophages towards a M1 phenotype with LPS
is accompanied by an increase in glucose uptake and an
accelerated conversion to lactate, while the rate of OXPHOS is
reduced [5,6]. Concomitantly, LPS induces extensive remodeling
of the actin cytoskeleton of macrophages. In vivo, the collective
changes in cell morphology and the formation of specific
membrane structures, like filopodia and membrane ruffles on
the surface of macrophages [12,13] form the morphodynamic
adjustments that help macrophages in adhering to the tissue
matrix and in probing and capturing phagocytic targets. In order
to determine whether the metabolic changes in LPS-stimulated
macrophages have any true morphofunctional significance, we
metabolically challenged RAW 264.7 cells, using conditions under
which cells remained fully viable. First, we assessed the surface
morphology and appearance of actin-based membrane protrusions, by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and fluorescence
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
Figure 1. Proliferation and viability of RAW 264.7 cells under different metabolic conditions. Proliferation was monitored for 24 hours in
the presence of LPS and expressed as the increase in total cellular protein in either control medium (25 mM glucose) or medium containing 2.5 mM
oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A), 10 mM 2-DG and 25 mM glucose (B), or 10 mM galactose and no glucose (C). Cell viability was also assessed for
24 hours under the same medium conditions in the presence of pSIVA apoptosis biosensor [50] (D). The appearance of the fluorescent pSIVA signal
was recorded in real time and the total pixel area per frame was measured using Fiji Imaging software. An increase in the pSIVA pixel area correlates
linearly with increase in the amount of apoptotic cells. Data in A–C represent means 6 SEM of three independent experiments performed in triplicate
and in D the averages of one experiment performed in triplicate. (*p,0.05, **p,0.01, ***p,0.001, unpaired t-test).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g001
In contrast, inhibition of glycolysis with 2-DG did not alter the
actin cytoskeleton or the cell morphology in either LPS- or
unstimulated cells (Figure 3G–J and Figure 4G–J). In combination,
our observations suggest that the presence or uptake of glucose,
but not necessarily its use in metabolic breakdown, is involved in
LPS-induced morphodynamic transitions in RAW 264.7 macrophages.
microscopy of (phalloidin-stained) RAW 264.7 cells before and
after LPS-stimulation. Oligomycin treated cells preserved the
ability to spread upon LPS-stimulation and appeared to have more
filopodia than control cells (Figure 3A–F and Figure 4A–F). These
thorn-like protrusions became clearly visible after 6 hours (not
shown) and were observed on both LPS stimulated and
unstimulated cells. Quantification of the number of filopodia
extending radially from the cell body after 24 hours, confirmed
that oligomycin induced filopodia formation in RAW 264.7 cells
(Figure 3K and 4K) although the extent of oligomycin effects (on
cells with and without LPS) as determined by fluorescence and
SEM microscopy varied. Partly this variation may be due to
differential effects of the fixation-staining, and also to the semiquantitative nature of protrusion recognition and scoring in the
image analyses, for the light- and electron microscopy assays.
Importantly, removing glucose from the culture medium markedly
affected cell morphology. Although the actin cytoskeletal morphology of unstimulated galactose treated cells did not deviate
much from control cells after 4 hours, LPS stimulated galactose
treated cells had markedly different actin cytoskeletal morphology
(Figure 3L–P). Instead of expanding their surface area and forming
distinct protrusions, galactose cells stayed rounded and had a
smaller cell circumference than control cells (Figure 3L; see also
SEM results Figure 4L–P). When galactose-containing medium
was supplemented with 1 mM glucose, the LPS-induced modifications of the cytoskeleton and surface morphology were similar to
those seen in control cells (Figure 3L&Q–T and Figure 4L&Q–T).
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LPS-induced Macrophage Spreading Depends on
Constant Glucose Supply
Next, to further investigate the role of glucose in LPS-induced
protrusive actin dynamics and obtain a more quantitative measure
of the effect of the different metabolic conditions on global
macrophage morphodynamics, we analyzed the spreading ability
of RAW 264.7 cells on fibronectin-coated glass. During cell
spreading, the increase in cell size is determined by global
reorganization of the cellular actin cytoskeleton [54]. Inhibition of
OXPHOS with oligomycin had no significant effect (Figure 5A),
whereas 2-DG treatment caused slight retardation of spreading
(Figure 5B). In contrast, removal of glucose from the medium and
replacement with galactose dramatically inhibited surface expansion. Even without pre-incubation (0 h), cells spread less efficient
in the absence of glucose. With pre-incubation in glucose-free
medium, spreading was further inhibited and already significantly
impaired after 3 hours of pre-treatment (Figure 5C). Typically, in
the presence of 1 mM glucose cells largely retained the ability to
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
Figure 2. ATP levels under different metabolic conditions and the effect of OXPHOS inhibition on glycolytic flux. RAW 264.7 cells were
incubated for the indicated time intervals with control (25 mM glucose) medium, or medium containing 2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose
(A,D,E), 10 mM 2-DG and 25 mM glucose (B), or 10 mM galactose and no glucose (C). Intracellular ATP concentrations and total cellular protein were
measured in PCA cell extracts (A,B,C). Glucose consumption (D) and lactate production (E) were measured in medium supernatants during the first 6
hours (0–6 h), the last 6 hours (18–24 h), as well as the whole 24 hours (0–24 h) of treatment. Data represent means 6 SEM of three experiments
performed in triplicate. (*p,0.05, unpaired t-test).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g002
expand their surface area (Figure 5D). Altogether, our findings are
in keeping with the morphological observations and indicate that
the availability of glucose is indispensable for LPS-induced
spreading of macrophages.
even more pronounced with prolonged (3 h) pre-treatment, a
period wherein cell viability was still not affected (Figure 1D). The
efficiency of particle internalization was, however, not compromised (Figure 6D) by addition of 2-DG. Phagocytosis in the
presence of oligomycin and 2-DG was also assessed in a second
macrophage cell line (Maf-DKO cells). In these cells, oligomycin
treatment had no effect at all, while 2-DG inhibited Maf-DKO
phagocytosis to the same extend as in RAW 264.7 cells (Figure
S2A, B).
Upon total glucose deprivation (by substitution with galactose),
the phagocytic index in both RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO cells
dropped immediately below 20% (Figure 6E and Figure S2C). An
even bigger drop was seen in RAW 264.7 cells after 4 and 14
hours (Figure 6E). It is important to note that at 0 and 4 hours the
cells were still fully viable. Thus, we conclude that the reduction in
phagocytic activity must be solely the result of insufficiency in
glucose availability and not be a secondary effect of functional
incapacitation. The low phagocytic index in the absence of glucose
was accompanied by a reduction in particle internalization
efficiency (Figure 6F) as well as a reduction in the binding
capacity of the cells since the percentage of FITC-COZ positive
cells was also reduced by more than 50% (results not shown).
These results suggest that glucose availability is essential for both
particle binding and internalization. Interestingly, and in keeping
with this conclusion, supplementation of galactose medium with
1 mM glucose enabled the cells to maintain full phagocytosis
capacity (Figure 6G&H).
Phagocytosis of Complement-opsonized Zymosan by
LPS-stimulated Macrophages is Fueled by Glycolysis and
Requires the Presence of Extracellular Glucose
We finally examined whether metabolic conditions (with
differential nutrient supply or inhibitor conditions as above) also
affect phagocytosis, the main actin-dependent function of macrophages [27]. Formation of the phagocytic cup is driven by local
polymerization of actin filaments, associated with membrane
alterations and regionally confined topological alterations at the
cell surface. Unlike cell spreading, particle uptake via phagocytosis,
therefore, is localized and determined by mechanistic events that
occur within the small area of contact between cell and particle.
Acute inhibition (0 h pre-incubation) of OXPHOS initially led to a
reduction in internalization efficiency as well as the overall
phagocytic index of RAW 264.7 cells (Figure 6A, B), however,
after three hours, phagocytosis efficiency was restored and with
longer oligomycin treatment (24 h) phagocytic index and the
particle internalization capacity was even higher than in control
cells. In the presence of ample glucose (25 mM), competitive
inhibition of glycolysis by 2-DG only inhibited phagocytosis
significantly after pre-incubation (Figure 6C). 2-DG did not have
an acute effect, but after 1 hour of 2-DG pre-incubation
phagocytosis was markedly down (p = 0.055). This effect became
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Figure 3. Actin cytoskeletal structural changes induced by inhibition of glycolysis or mitochondrial OXPHOS. RAW 264.7 cells were
seeded on glass coverslips, incubated in control medium or medium containing 2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A–F), 10 mM 2-DG and
25 mM glucose (G–J), 10 mM galactose and no glucose (M–P), or 1 mM glucose and 10 mM galactose (Q–T) for the indicated time periods and
stimulated overnight with LPS or left unstimulated. After fixation in 2% PFA, cellular actin was stained with phalloidin-Alexa568 and cells were imaged
on a Zeiss LSM510 meta confocal laser scanning microscope. The number of filopodia extending radially from the cell surface (expressed as #
filopodia per mM contour length; see M&M) was determined for control cells and cells treated for 24 hours with oligomycin, in the presence and
absence of LPS (K). The average cell circumference was determined for cells in control medium or medium containing 10 mM galactose, or 1 mM
glucose and 10 mM galactose (L). (*p,0.05, **p,0.01, ***p,0.001, unpaired t-test).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g003
results suggest that macrophages require the presence of glucose in
order to successfully bind and internalize COZ particles.
Finally, we wanted to determine whether the inhibitory effect of
acute glucose deprivation on phagocytosis could be directly
rescued by reintroducing glucose. RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO
cells were incubated with FITC-COZ in galactose medium for
30 minutes after which 1 mM of glucose was added and cells were
incubated for another 30 minutes. RAW 264.7 phagocytosis
capacity was restored to 45% while Maf-DKO cells regained
75% of their phagocytosis capacity (Figure 6I). Taken together,
our findings imply that glycolysis is critical for phagocytosis of
COZ while OXPHOS activity is dispensable. Moreover, our
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Discussion
Increased morphodynamic activity, facilitated by rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton, is a cellular response characteristic
to LPS-stimulated macrophages. This dynamic actin remodeling is
essential to macrophage function and considered to be an energy
draining process. In endothelial cells, actin-ATP hydrolysis
accounts for almost a fifth (18%) of total ATP consumption [55]
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
Figure 4. Effect of glucose deprivation and glycolysis or OXPHOS inhibition on morphology of RAW 264.7 cells. Cells were seeded on
glass coverslips, incubated in control medium or medium containing 2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A–F), 10 mM 2-DG and 25 mM glucose
(G–J), 10 mM galactose and no glucose (M–P), or 1 mM glucose and 10 mM galactosel (Q–T) for the indicated time periods and stimulated overnight
with LPS or left unstimulated. Coverslips were fixed and subjected to scanning electron microscopy. The number of filopodia extending radially from
the cell surface was determined for control cells and cells treated for 24 hours with oligomycin, in the presence and absence of LPS (K). The average
cell circumference was determined for cells in control medium or medium containing 10 mM galactose, or 1 mM glucose and 10 mM galactose (L).
(***p,0.001, unpaired t-test). (Bar = 10 mm).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g004
not essential for fueling of morphodynamic processes in macrophages. We found that oxygen consumption in resting RAW 264.7
and Maf-DKO cells is two to four times lower than, for example,
in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (Figure S1; [57]). More direct
support for the dispensability of mitochondrial metabolism comes
from the observation that, even under conditions where we
enforced an almost complete dependency on glycolysis by
treatment with oligomycin, the ability of RAW 264.7 macrophages
to undergo LPS-induced actin cytoskeleton remodeling remained
intact. Although phagocytosis capacity in RAW 264.7 cells was
initially inhibited upon acute oligomycin treatment, this was
restored within three hours and did not occur in Maf-DKO cells at
and in platelets and neurons it is estimated to be more than 50%
[26,56]. Cellular energy metabolism and actin-based cell dynamics
are, therefore, tightly coupled processes. Against this backdrop
LPS also induces a shift in macrophage redox metabolism,
accompanied by increased fluxes through glycolysis as well the
pentose phosphate pathway for NADPH production [5,7]. Here
we asked the question whether these temporal associations also
involve a functional regulatory coupling between metabolic and
morphodynamic changes in LPS stimulated macrophages.
Our results show that the contribution of mitochondrial
OXPHOS to cellular energy production is significantly smaller
than that of glycolysis and that mitochondrial OXPHOS activity is
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
Figure 5. LPS-stimulated spreading of RAW 264.7 macrophages is compromised by glucose deprivation. RAW 264.7 macrophages
expressing Lifeact-EYFP were pre-incubated in control medium or medium containing 2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A), 10 mM 2-DG and
25 mM glucose (B), 10 mM galactose and no glucose (C), or 1 mM glucose and 10 mM galactosel (D) medium for the indicated time periods. To
assess spreading efficiency, cells were detached with EDTA, re-suspended, seeded in 96 well plates and allowed to adhere. Cell spreading of EYFPpositive cells was recorded over time using a BD Pathway high content microscope. The average pixel area per cell was determined at 10 minute
intervals. Lines and bars represent means 6 SEM of three independent experiments performed in triplicate. For every condition, representative
images of cells at 0 and 200 minutes are presented in the panel on the right.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g005
additionally showed that OXPHOS has also a negligible role in
other aspects of macrophage morphodynamics.
In contrast, glucose metabolism through glycolysis (the dominating metabolic route of LPS-stimulated macrophages) was
clearly indispensable. Perturbation of this pathway was achieved
either by using the glycolytic inhibitor 2-DG, or by replacing
all. Our observations are consistent with an earlier study by
Kvarstein [58], wherein it was shown that OXPHOS inhibition
with oligomycin and antimycin only had an effect on phagocytosis
when used in combination with 2-DG. Another study by Cifarelli
et al. [43] showed minor inhibition of phagocytosis with sodium
azide and 2–4-dinitrophenol only after 3 hours. Our findings
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
Figure 6. Macrophages require glucose for phagocytosis of COZ. RAW 264.7 cells were incubated for the indicated times with control
medium, or medium containing 2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A&B), 10 mM 2-DG and 25 mM glucose (C&D), 10 mM galactose and no
glucose (E&F), or 10 mM galactose and 1 mM glucose (G&H) and stimulated o/n with 100 ng/ml LPS. The phagocytic index (A,C,E&G) was determined
by incubating cells in the respective media with FITC-labeled complement opsonized zymosan (COZ) particles for 30 min, analyzed by FACS and
calculated as described in materials and methods. The internalization efficiency (B,D,F&H) was determined by quenching extracellular FITC-COZ of
one sample fraction with 0.05% trypan blue in potassium dihydrogen citrate/saline, pH 4.4. Unquenched fractions were used to determine the total
fluorescence per cell (internalized and external particles), while quenched fractions were used to measure only the internal fluorescence per cell. The
effect of reintroducing glucose (+1 mM Gluc) in the medium after 30 minutes of phagocytosis in glucose-free medium was assessed in both RAW
264.7 and Maf-DKO cells (I). Values in A,C,E,G&I represent normalized means 6 SEM of three or four independent experiments performed in triplicate
(*p,0.05, **p,0.01, ***p,0.001; one-sample t-test (A–H) or two-way ANOVA and Bonferroni posttest (I)). Values in B,D,F&H represent means 6 SEM
of three experiments performed in triplicate. (*p,0.05; unpaired t-test).
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0096786.g006
glucose with galactose in the culture medium, thereby forcing the
cells to synthesize and use mitochondrial ATP instead of ATP
obtained from glycolysis [59,60]. Although 2-DG treatment did
not affect the LPS-induced morphology of RAW 264.7 cells, it
caused a minor inhibition of the spreading ability of these cells.
Additionally, inhibition of glycolysis with 2-DG also led to a
significant reduction in phagocytosis capacity. This has been
reported before for leukocytes in general and peritoneal macrophages [42,58,61]. Here, we extend these observations and
additionally show that phagocytosis of complement opsonized
zymosan by both RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO cells depends on the
presence of glucose in the cultivation medium during the time of
uptake. We know only of two other papers that have reported on
direct effects of glucose deprivation. In these studies, phagocytosis
of unopsonized P.aeruginosa by human and murine peritoneal and
alveolar macrophages was shown to depend on the presence of
glucose in the culture medium [62,63]. However, the glucose
dependency did not apply to phagocytosis of P. aeruginosa
opsonized with polyclonal rabbit serum, latex particles, unopsonized zymosan, or RBCs opsonized with IgG or IgM and
complement. Although we only examined COZ phagocytosis and
used only two macrophage cell lines here, our findings suggest that
glucose availability may be important for a wider range of actindependent processes and monocyte cell types. One rarely
discussed process in this context is macropinocytosis activity,
which also requires a dynamic actin cytoskeleton. Macropinocytosis activity of macrophages is AMPK-mediated and induced by
low glucose conditions [64]. In turn, macropinocytosis may
contribute to nutrient uptake capacity, although glucose import
probably occurs mainly through GLUT in LPS-stimulated
macrophages [6]. Here we would like to speculate that the
differences in membrane ruffling (not shown) and recovery of
phagocytic activity upon reintroduction of glucose (75% vs. 45%)
that we observed between Maf-DKO and RAW 264.7 cells may
have to do with the extend of macropinocytosis activity - and
metabolic regulation thereof - in these cell lines. It is of note here
that phagocytosis and macropinocytosis are mechanistically
related processes, and – especially in the initiation phase – also
share many morphological features. Alteration of the actin
organization, due to loss of MafB, may also explain the differences
between the two types of macrophages studied here [65].
Why is presence of glucose so important for formation of actin
rich protrusions and spreading and other functional activities of
LPS-stimulated macrophages? One possible answer is that there is
a direct link to local ATP-production, even though global ATP
levels were not affected under the conditions applied. Commonly,
when glycolytic ATP-production is disturbed, cells adapt to the use
of other substrates such as fatty acids and amino acids (especially
glutamine) for ATP production. It has been shown that
thioglycollate elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages (which are
partially M2-polarized) utilize fatty acids to fuel phagocytosis,
especially when glucose is limiting. However, in LPS-stimulated
PLOS ONE | www.plosone.org
macrophages, the mitochondrial route for ATP-production from
fatty acid oxidation is overtly downregulated [8]. This suggests
that LPS-stimulated macrophages do not have many alternative
sources for fast supply of ATP. Moreover, the intracellular
distribution of ATP may play a role. We and others have shown
that adenylate kinase or creatine kinase catalyzed phosphotransfer
reactions may help in the local ATP supply that is needed for
remodeling of the cortical areas of cells during phagocytosis and
migration [27,28,66,67]. Since it is generally accepted that actinrich membrane structures such as filopodia, lamellipodia, ruffles,
and maybe also the phagocytic cup, are too thin to contain
mitochondria, glucose and its breakdown via glycolysis may be the
only source for local ATP production in these structures in LPSstimulated macrophages. In other cell types, glycolytic enzymes
such as aldolase and GAPDH have been shown to be compartmentalized in cortical actin structures, such as pseudopodia,
invadopodia, and lamellipodia, and to associate with the actin
cytoskeleton [37,39,40,68,69]. Although very little is known about
the proteome of the early forming phagocytic cup, proteomic
studies of the phagosome have also identified a role for GAPDH in
phagocytosis [70]. A role for glucose catabolism via glycolysis in
local - not global - ATP homeostasis may thus explain our findings.
A second metabolic role for glucose could be the supply of
intermediates in reactions that supply fatty acids and phospholipids for direct local incorporation into the cell membrane [71]. This
process is important for maintaining membrane fluidity and for
supply of membrane components during formation of protrusions
or maturation of the phagocytic cup and movement of the
phagosome, respectively. In addition, LPS-stimulated macrophages secrete inflammatory compounds such as IL-1, IL-6, and
TNFa. High glycolytic activity may be essential for the synthesis
and post-translational modifications of these compounds, as has
been shown for quiescent fibroblasts which maintain high
glycolytic activity for the synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins
[72].
Striking, although considered a gentler way of modulating cell
metabolism, since glucose is still available, 2-DG treatment
induced cell death earlier than glucose deprivation in our
unstimulated cells, although it had a less severe effect on LPSinduced morphodynamics. This raises the possibility that, apart
from providing fuel and anabolic material, glucose could affect
cellular morphodynamics through another (non-metabolic) mechanism. Indeed, several studies have revealed a direct role for
glucose metabolism in posttranslational modification of proteins
and signaling to the actin cytoskeleton. Although not known for
complement receptor 3, other macrophage receptors that are
involved in phagocytosis and adhesion to the extracellular matrix,
like CD36, FccRIII, and CR5a, contain sites for N-linked
glycosylation [73–75]. 2-DG has been shown to interfere with
(i.e. poison) N-linked glycosylation in tumor cells, a process that
could be reversed by exogenous addition of mannose [76]. It may,
therefore, be possible that 2-DG interfered with normal macro12
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Glucose Controls Macrophage Morphodynamics
phage receptor expression and function. Michl et al. [42]
suggested that 2-DG interferes with reactions that link Fcc- and
C3-receptors with the intracellular contractile apparatus, based on
the observation that cellular ATP levels were not disturbed after 2DG treatment and that the inhibitory effect of 2-DG on
phagocytosis was reversed upon addition of mannose or high
glucose concentrations. Furthermore, in studies on glucoseinduced insulin secretion in pancreatic islet cells and other
insulin-secreting cells, such as INS-1, HIT, and MIN6 cells,
glucose metabolism has been implicated in the activation of the
small GTPase Cdc42, an upstream regulator of actin remodeling.
Nevins and Thurmond [77] showed in MIN6 b-cells, that glucose
stimulation promotes actin cytoskeletal remodeling by causing
alterations in the cycling of Cdc42 between its active GTP-bound
and inactive GDP-bound form. Transient activation involves the
carboxylmethylation of Cdc42, and occurs rapidly (within 15–
30 sec) [78], while deactivation of Cdc42 involves glycosylation of
this small RhoGTPase and correlates with transient depolymerization of cortical actin [77]. This suggests that glucose regulates
the cortical actin network through modulation of Cdc42 cycling.
Transient activation of Cdc42 leads to activation of PAK1 and
then Rac1 (another small GTPase involved in actin cytoskeletal
remodeling) within 15 minutes after glucose exposure [79].
Finally, Uenishi et al. [80] have recently shown that glucose
activates N-WASP via Cdc42 and induces its translocation to the
cell membrane of insulin-secreting clonal pancreatic b-cells
(MIN6-K8 b-cells). Moreover, glucose stimulation caused
LIMK1-mediated phosphorylation and deactivation of cofilin via
Cdc42 and PAK1. The timing of these effects may explain why
acute removal of glucose from the culture medium had a markedly
inhibitory effect on phagocytosis and also why reintroduction of
glucose instantaneously restored phagocytosis capacity in our
study. Interestingly, LPS signaling to the cytoskeleton also involves
the Cdc42-PAK1-Rac1-LIMK1-pathway [81]. LPS stimulation
additionally increases glucose uptake and metabolism via PI3K/
Akt which are signaling molecules upstream of Cdc42 and Rac1
[82–85]. Therefore, by incorporating glucose as signaling molecule, the metabolic changes that are induced by LPS may serve to
reinforce the functional changes that macrophage must undergo in
order to fulfill their function in host defense and tissue homeostasis.
In summary, our results further establish a pivotal role for
glucose and its breakdown via glycolysis in the control of
morphodynamic activity in LPS-stimulated macrophages. Based
on findings in other cell systems, we consider it likely that for
exerting this role, the multitalented properties of glucose as
metabolic precursor and molecule for use in post-translational
modification of cytoskeletal (associated) structural proteins, recep-
tors or signaling proteins are being used. More in depth
investigation is required to further unravel these glucose-related
events that control the activities of macrophages.
Supporting Information
Oxygen consumption in RAW 264.7 and MafDKO macrophages. Oxygen consumption was measured in
suspensions of 16106 cells on an Oroboros Oxygraph-2k
respirometer. RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO cells were analyzed in
parallel on the same day. The basal oxygen consumption was
measured where after oligomycin, FCCP, and rotenone was added
successively in order to determine the leak respiration, maximal
respiration (Max), and residual oxygen consumption (Res).
Columns represent means 6 SEM of four experiments.
(TIF)
Figure S1
Figure S2 Macrophages require glucose for phagocytosis of COZ. RAW 264.7 and Maf-DKO cells were incubated for
the indicated times in control medium, or medium containing
2.5 mM oligomycin and 25 mM glucose (A), 10 mM 2-DG and
25 mM glucose (B), or 10 mM galactose and no glucose (C) and
stimulated o/n with 100 ng/ml LPS. Phagocytosis efficiency was
determined by incubating cells in the respective media with FITClabeled complement opsonized zymosan (COZ) particles for
30 min and analyzing samples by FACS. Values represent
normalized means 6 SEM of three independent experiments
performed in triplicate. (*p,0.05, **p,0.01, ***p,0.001; onesample t-test).
(TIF)
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Dr. Hong-Hee Kim (Department of Cell and
Developmental Biology, School of Dentistry, Seoul National University,
Korea) for providing the RAW 264.7 cell line, Dr. Ralf Langen (University
of Southern California) for supplying the pSIVA apoptosis biosensor, Dr.
Michael H. Sieweke (Centre d’Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy (CIML),
Université Aix-Marseille, France) for providing the Maf-DKO cells,
Ganesh Manjeri (Department of Biochemistry, NCMLS, Radboud
UMC, Nijmegen, The Netherlands) for help with the oxygen consumption
assays, and Cindy Dieteren and Ineke van der Zee (Department of Cell
Biology, NCMLS, Radboud UMC, Nijmegen, The Netherlands) for
statistical advice with regard to the spreading assays.
Author Contributions
Conceived and designed the experiments: GV JF BW. Performed the
experiments: GV FO M. Wijers M. Willemse. Analyzed the data: GV FO.
Wrote the paper: GV JF BW.
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