Nicholas D Condon1, John M Heddleston2, Teng-Leong Chew2, Lin Luo1, Peter S McPherson3, Maria S Ioannou3, Louis Hodgson4, Jennifer L Stow5, Adam A Wall6. 1. Institute for Molecular Bioscience (IMB) and IMB Centre for Inflammation and Disease Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. 2. Advanced Imaging Center, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, VA. 3. Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada. 4. Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology, Gruss-Lipper Biophotonics Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY. 5. Institute for Molecular Bioscience (IMB) and IMB Centre for Inflammation and Disease Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia j.stow@imb.uq.edu.au. 6. Institute for Molecular Bioscience (IMB) and IMB Centre for Inflammation and Disease Research, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia a.wall@imb.uq.edu.au.
Abstract
Pathogen-mediated activation of macrophages arms innate immune responses that include enhanced surface ruffling and macropinocytosis for environmental sampling and receptor internalization and signaling. Activation of macrophages with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) generates prominent dorsal ruffles, which are precursors for macropinosomes. Very rapid, high-resolution imaging of live macrophages with lattice light sheet microscopy (LLSM) reveals new features and actions of dorsal ruffles, which redefine the process of macropinosome formation and closure. We offer a new model in which ruffles are erected and supported by F-actin tent poles that cross over and twist to constrict the forming macropinosomes. This process allows for formation of large macropinosomes induced by LPS. We further describe the enrichment of active Rab13 on tent pole ruffles and show that CRISPR deletion of Rab13 results in aberrant tent pole ruffles and blocks the formation of large LPS-induced macropinosomes. Based on the exquisite temporal and spatial resolution of LLSM, we can redefine the ruffling and macropinosome processes that underpin innate immune responses.
Pathogen-mediated activation of macrophages arms innate immune responses that include enhanced surface ruffling and macropinocytosis for environmental sampling and receptor internalization and signaling. Activation of macrophages with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) generates prominent dorsal ruffles, which are precursors for macropinosomes. Very rapid, high-resolution imaging of live macrophages with lattice light sheet microscopy (LLSM) reveals new features and actions of dorsal ruffles, which redefine the process of macropinosome formation and closure. We offer a new model in which ruffles are erected and supported by F-actin tent poles that cross over and twist to constrict the forming macropinosomes. This process allows for formation of large macropinosomes induced by LPS. We further describe the enrichment of active Rab13 on tent pole ruffles and show that CRISPR deletion of Rab13 results in aberrant tent pole ruffles and blocks the formation of large LPS-induced macropinosomes. Based on the exquisite temporal and spatial resolution of LLSM, we can redefine the ruffling and macropinosome processes that underpin innate immune responses.
The macrophage cell surface is distinguished by its highly dynamic protrusions,
constant movement, and its high rate of membrane turnover, all of which serve the
role of macrophages as innate immune sentinels (Stow and Condon, 2016). Surface ruffling is a prevalent feature of
immune cells and can give rise to macropinosomes. According to current dogma, linear
ruffles transiently appear and then circularize (closing a C shape) to form
the macropinocytic cup (Swanson,
2008); but how this open cup forms a closed macropinosome is yet to be fully
discerned. Other cell types have much larger, more stable, so-called circular dorsal
ruffles (Orth and McNiven, 2006).
Macrophages ruffle and macropinocytose constitutively, but growth factors like
colony-stimulating factor and contact with pathogens or activation of Toll-like
receptors enhance ruffling and macropinocytosis (Patel and Harrison, 2008; Swanson,
2008; Canton et al., 2016; Wall et al., 2017). In these and other cells,
macropinocytosis also supports cell growth and mTORC1 signaling through the uptake
of macromolecules and amino acids, respectively (Welliver and Swanson, 2012; Commisso et
al., 2013; Yoshida et al.,
2015). Dorsal ruffles and the macropinosomes they generate are key receptor
signaling domains, including for Toll-like receptors (Kagan et al., 2008; Luo et
al., 2014). Dorsal ruffles are formed through the actions of actin
polymerizing proteins, and they become enriched in membrane phospholipids, lipid
kinases, signaling kinases, and small G proteins that support these as specialized
sites for signaling (Swanson, 2008; Yoshida et al., 2009; Bohdanowicz et al., 2013).Several Rab GTPases, including Rabs 8, 34, and 5 are associated with surface ruffles
or macropinosomes (Sun et al., 2003; Schnatwinkel et al., 2004; Wall et al., 2017). Herein we also introduce
Rab13 as a Rab functioning in this milieu. Rab13 has afore noted roles in post-Golgi
trafficking (Nokes et al., 2008),
Glut4-containing vesicle exocytosis (Sun et al.,
2016), and epithelial junction regulation (Köhler et al., 2004), and it is found at the leading
edge of cancer cells where it promotes migration and metastasis (Ioannou et al., 2015). The imaging performed
in the current study serves to reveal a specific role for Rab13 in the assembly of
large LPS-induced ruffles that give rise to enlarged macropinosomes in activated
macrophages.The formation of ruffles and macropinosomes has been studied using multiple imaging
modalities, and previous studies have described ruffle formation, macropinosome
closure, and subsequent scission from the plasma membrane (Welliver and Swanson, 2012; Levin et al., 2015). However, these events occur on a scale of minutes
(Welliver and Swanson, 2012; Wall et al., 2017) and take place in a 3D
space spanning micrometers in the x, y, and z dimensions, with protein transition
events occurring at sub-minute intervals. In general, most imaging modalities lack
the integrated temporal and spatial resolution to adequately capture these events,
leaving open questions about the nature of how ruffles generate macropinosomes. In
this study, we used lattice light sheet microscopy (LLSM) for live imaging of the
macrophage surface, in 3D, with speeds and resolutions that have not previously been
possible. This has produced new insights into ruffling and macropinosome formation,
revealing new structural features of the ruffles and a new mode of ruffle closure
that redefine this essential internalization pathway.
Results and discussion
A new type of dorsal ruffle formation revealed by LLSM
The surface of LPS activated macrophages is replete with prominent and highly
dynamic F-actin–rich dorsal ruffles, which can be optimally viewed
through the high-speed/high-resolution imaging generated by LLSM. RAW macrophage
cell lines were stably transfected with GFP-LifeAct, and using LLSM, we could,
for the first time, image large fields of view with multiple activated cells and
at great temporal and spatial resolution. The video in Fig. 1 A (Video 1) shows the complete cell volume captured
every 1.4 s, depicting the constant ruffling of the macrophage surface. A second
example (Fig. 1 B), displays ruffles in a
single frame of a time series (Video 2), and with temporal color coding, a
series of 75 frames (∼3.5 min) illustrates the highly dynamic and
transient nature of the ruffles themselves. Thus, this imaging highlights the
constant motion of the macrophage cell surface and the highly dynamic nature of
the dorsal ruffles themselves, which is important contextual information for
events occurring on these membrane domains, such as fluid uptake, as well as
receptor clustering, signaling, and endocytosis (Stow and Condon, 2016).
Figure 1.
LLSM of macrophage ruffling. RAW 264.7 macrophages stably
expressing GFP-LifeAct and incubated in medium containing LPS were
imaged using LLSM. (A) Single frame from LLSM recording
(Video 1) visualized in 3D by tilting the field of view (FOV) to
visualize the top and side of the cell. GFP-LifeAct fluorescence was
visualized using the Orange-Hot Look Up Table (LUT) from the Amira data
visualization software. (B) A second recording is depicted
as an inverted grayscale MIP (Video 2) and then temporal color coding of
75 frames (1’45”) is illustrated in the right-hand panel.
Bars, 10 µm.
LLSM of macrophage ruffling. RAW 264.7 macrophages stably
expressing GFP-LifeAct and incubated in medium containing LPS were
imaged using LLSM. (A) Single frame from LLSM recording
(Video 1) visualized in 3D by tilting the field of view (FOV) to
visualize the top and side of the cell. GFP-LifeAct fluorescence was
visualized using the Orange-Hot Look Up Table (LUT) from the Amira data
visualization software. (B) A second recording is depicted
as an inverted grayscale MIP (Video 2) and then temporal color coding of
75 frames (1’45”) is illustrated in the right-hand panel.
Bars, 10 µm.Previous studies have comprehensively mapped the formation of C-shaped dorsal
ruffles and macropinocytic cups on macrophages and other cells (Swanson, 2008). However, at high spatial
and temporal resolution with LLSM, a new type of dorsal ruffle emerges, and this
is displayed in 3D volumetric data (Fig. 2
A and Video 3). Two prominent filopodial-like extensions (red and
white arrows, Fig. 2 A) erected on the
cell surface at the outer edges of the ruffle act as “tent poles”
to raise up the large, F-actin sheet—the veil of the
ruffle—between them. In Video 3, these tent poles can be seen
dramatically crossing over in a twisting action. 3D surface rendering displays
the ruffle structure and the dynamic movements of the tent pole pair within the
sheet (red and white arrows, Fig. 2 B and
Video 4). In this sequence, the ruffle is clearly seen constricting as it sinks
into the cell or collapses, commensurate with the anticipated formation of a
macropinosome. A further 3D-rendered cell shows the crossing over of the tent
poles accompanying circularization of the membrane ruffle (Fig. 2 C and Video 5). The color overlays on these images
depict typical tent poles functioning as pairs, with one drawn away from the
other, stringing the ruffle between them. Then, the second pole circles back,
conspicuously crossing over the first until the bases come together, and the
tent poles twist together, ratcheting in the ruffle veil as a spiral as it
simultaneously sinks into the cell (Fig. 2
C and Video 5). The top-down view shows the tent poles (red and
green) twisting together in a clockwise fashion, coinciding with constriction of
the ruffle aperture, followed by presumptive closure of a nascent macropinosome.
Thus, the F-actin tent poles are a major new and integral feature of the
ruffles. The tent poles are dynamic and difficult to visualize as part of the
ruffles using other forms of live cell imaging, which is why they may not have
been described previously. They have the outward appearance of filopodia, and
whether they differ at a molecular level from other forms of filopodia on the
cell surface is not yet known.
Figure 2.
LLSM imaging reveals tent pole ruffles. Macrophages stably
expressing GFP-LifeAct incubated in medium containing LPS were imaged
using LLSM. (A) Single frame from LLSM recording (Video 3)
visualized by tilting the FOV on the x axis and using the Amira
Blue-Green LUT. Boxed region shows 11-s intervals illustrating a full
ruffling event. Tent poles at the ruffle margins are marked with red and
white arrows. (B) A second example using a 3D-surface
render of GFP-LifeAct (Video 4) to show details of tent poles within the
F-actin sheath. Poles indicated by the red and white arrows switch sides
during crossover. (C) 3D rendering of x,y and x,z ruffle
event (Video 5). The marginal tent poles are overlaid with red and
green. The ruffle veil is overlaid blue, and in the upper panel, it is
extracted from the x,y plane to illustrate the linear ruffle
circularization and constriction phases. Bars: 10 µm (main panels);
5 µm (inset panels). Time stamps, min:s. (D)
Quantification of ruffle type from Videos 1 and 2. Data are represented
as mean ± SEM; n = 6 cells with a total of 133
tent pole–associated and 27 non–tent
pole–associated ruffles. (E) Formation of ruffles in
the same location (hotspots) from a 30-min period in Videos 1 and 2,
represented as a frequency distribution. Frequency distribution is
calculated as a percentage from n = 10 cells,
containing 104 hotspots and 345 ruffles. (F) Quantification
of mean ruffle duration and mean time to crossover of tent poles. Data
are represented as a min/max box whisker plot calculated using
n = 115 events.
LLSM imaging reveals tent pole ruffles. Macrophages stably
expressing GFP-LifeAct incubated in medium containing LPS were imaged
using LLSM. (A) Single frame from LLSM recording (Video 3)
visualized by tilting the FOV on the x axis and using the Amira
Blue-Green LUT. Boxed region shows 11-s intervals illustrating a full
ruffling event. Tent poles at the ruffle margins are marked with red and
white arrows. (B) A second example using a 3D-surface
render of GFP-LifeAct (Video 4) to show details of tent poles within the
F-actin sheath. Poles indicated by the red and white arrows switch sides
during crossover. (C) 3D rendering of x,y and x,z ruffle
event (Video 5). The marginal tent poles are overlaid with red and
green. The ruffle veil is overlaid blue, and in the upper panel, it is
extracted from the x,y plane to illustrate the linear ruffle
circularization and constriction phases. Bars: 10 µm (main panels);
5 µm (inset panels). Time stamps, min:s. (D)
Quantification of ruffle type from Videos 1 and 2. Data are represented
as mean ± SEM; n = 6 cells with a total of 133
tent pole–associated and 27 non–tent
pole–associated ruffles. (E) Formation of ruffles in
the same location (hotspots) from a 30-min period in Videos 1 and 2,
represented as a frequency distribution. Frequency distribution is
calculated as a percentage from n = 10 cells,
containing 104 hotspots and 345 ruffles. (F) Quantification
of mean ruffle duration and mean time to crossover of tent poles. Data
are represented as a min/max box whisker plot calculated using
n = 115 events.The movement and twisting of the tent poles implies the need for actin-based
motors at the tent pole bases for both linear and rotational motion. Potential
myosin motors, such as motors of the myosin I, II, and V subfamilies are found
in dorsal ruffles (Edgar and Bennett,
1997). An interesting precedent for rotational movement is the myosin
V–driven rotation at the base of filopodia, which happens in a circular
motion and in the direction of a right handed screw (Tamada et al., 2010; Zidovska and Sackmann, 2011). Finally, the tent poles move to
circumscribe the outer limits of the forming macropinocytic cup, and this could
form the proposed diffusion barrier, which segregates and concentrates signaling
components within the ruffle (Welliver et al.,
2011).Quantification based on extended videos (e.g., Videos 1 and 2) show that the
majority (83%) of the ruffles appearing are associated with tent pole ruffles
during their lifetimes, and the other 17% includes a variety of small and
petal-shaped ruffles that are not further defined here (Fig. 2 D). It is notable that tent pole ruffles keep
reforming in “hotspots” on the cell surface (Fig. 2 E), with examples even showing apparent reuse of
tent poles to form successive ruffles, suggesting that there may be a
sub-cortical concentration of machinery or membrane delivery that regenerates
tent poles and ruffling. The tent pole ruffles are very dynamic and short-lived
with a mean duration of 176 s, and 90 s of this time precedes the tent pole
crossover that demarks the cup formation (Fig. 2
F). These attributes highlight the more rapid, transient nature of
the tent pole ruffles and their different behavior, compared with prototypical
circular dorsal ruffles on other cell types that can last up to 30 min (Krueger et al., 2003). Finally, while
LLSM imaging of tent pole ruffles has been done largely on RAW macrophages, we
have also observed tent pole ruffles on other cell types, including cancer cells
(Fig. S1 A), showing that this ruffling mechanism is not limited to immune
cells.
Formation of macropinosomes from tent pole ruffles
We next gathered evidence to prove that tent pole ruffles do indeed go on to form
macropinosomes as they collapse. In imaging of ruffling events, an empty void
appears in the subcortical space under GFP-LifeAct–labeled tent pole
ruffles at the point of tent pole crossover (Fig. 3 A and Video 6). In Fig. 3
A, there is an existing void (a presumptive macropinosome) and a new
void forming at the base of a tent pole ruffle (asterisk). These voids can also
be seen forming beneath tent pole ruffles labeled simultaneously for F-actin and
a membrane marker, Halo-KRas-Tail (Fig. S1 B and Video 7). The fate of these
voids was then confirmed by imaging cells coexpressing GFP-LifeAct and
Halo-Rab5c as an early macropinosome marker (Fig. 3 B and Video 8). Viewed from the top and the side,
F-actin–rich dorsal ruffles form, twist, and collapse, followed by the
recruitment of Halo-Rab5c on the underlying macropinosome. In key frames we show
that the void underneath the F-actin ruffle appears before Rab5c labeling and it
sinks down into the cytoplasm (Fig. 3 B;
reslice). The final frames of the video then show that F-actin depolymerizes as
the early macropinosomes acquire Rab5c, in accord with current knowledge (Schnatwinkel et al., 2004). A second
example of a tent pole ruffle converting to a macropinosome is shown in cells
expressing Halo-KRas-Tail and GFP-2×FYVE as marker of the early
macropinosome phosphoinositide and a Rab5 product (Fig. 3 C and Video 9). Thus, the tent pole dorsal ruffles
do indeed form macropinosomes from the membrane sheet that begins to sink at the
same time as the tent poles begin to cross over and then twist to help close the
macropinosome. This completes the tent pole ruffle-to-macropinosome life cycle,
which is depicted as a model in Fig. 3 D.
The model highlights that the action of the tent poles produces a single tight
aperture for final sealing, in contrast to the current model for cup formation
and closure, which entails sealing at multiple points or extended areas around
the ruffle/cup margins (Swanson, 2008).
While the nature of the sealing is still a matter of conjecture, this new model
reduces this action to virtually a single point on the plasma membrane.
Figure 3.
Tent pole ruffles collapse to form macropinosomes. (A)
Macrophages stably expressing GFP-LifeAct. Cells were treated with 100
ng/ml LPS and imaged using LLSM. GFP-LifeAct is represented using the
Cyan Hot LUT from ImageJ. Key frames from Video 6. MIP (x,y) and an x,z
resliced through the ruffling event is indicated by the gray bar in the
top left inset frame. Arrowheads indicate the position of tent poles.
Asterisks denotes the macropinosomal void. (B) Macrophages
stably expressing GFP-LifeAct and Halo-Rab5c imaged in medium containing
LPS. Cells were imaged using LLSM and Halo-tagged proteins were labeled
with 10nM JF549. Left large panel shows whole FOV tilted on
the x axis from Videos 6 and 7. Small panels show x,z and x,y of boxed
cell with second inset box showing one tent pole ruffling event. Reslice
of key frames shows the void of the presumptive macropinosome indicated
on the merged image with the dotted circle. Separation of the void from
the plasma membrane cannot be verified in these images. (C)
LLSM of RAW 264.7 macrophages transiently expressing GFP-2×FYVE and
Halo-KRas-Tail. Cells were stained with 10 nM JF549 and
imaged in media containing LPS. Inset frames were rendered using Imaris
and visualized on an x,z side-tilt. Arrow indicates tent pole position
in ruffle. (D) Model of macropinosome formation
incorporating tent pole crossover and twisting during the constriction
phase. Green indicates the ruffle veil, the nascent macropinosome in
yellow. The base of each pole is marked as a gray and blue circle. Bars:
10 µm (main panels); 5 µm (inset panels). Time stamps,
min:s.
Tent pole ruffles collapse to form macropinosomes. (A)
Macrophages stably expressing GFP-LifeAct. Cells were treated with 100
ng/ml LPS and imaged using LLSM. GFP-LifeAct is represented using the
Cyan Hot LUT from ImageJ. Key frames from Video 6. MIP (x,y) and an x,z
resliced through the ruffling event is indicated by the gray bar in the
top left inset frame. Arrowheads indicate the position of tent poles.
Asterisks denotes the macropinosomal void. (B) Macrophages
stably expressing GFP-LifeAct and Halo-Rab5c imaged in medium containing
LPS. Cells were imaged using LLSM and Halo-tagged proteins were labeled
with 10nM JF549. Left large panel shows whole FOV tilted on
the x axis from Videos 6 and 7. Small panels show x,z and x,y of boxed
cell with second inset box showing one tent pole ruffling event. Reslice
of key frames shows the void of the presumptive macropinosome indicated
on the merged image with the dotted circle. Separation of the void from
the plasma membrane cannot be verified in these images. (C)
LLSM of RAW 264.7 macrophages transiently expressing GFP-2×FYVE and
Halo-KRas-Tail. Cells were stained with 10 nM JF549 and
imaged in media containing LPS. Inset frames were rendered using Imaris
and visualized on an x,z side-tilt. Arrow indicates tent pole position
in ruffle. (D) Model of macropinosome formation
incorporating tent pole crossover and twisting during the constriction
phase. Green indicates the ruffle veil, the nascent macropinosome in
yellow. The base of each pole is marked as a gray and blue circle. Bars:
10 µm (main panels); 5 µm (inset panels). Time stamps,
min:s.To further dissect the model of tent pole ruffles, it will now be important to
make use of LLSM to reexamine, at high resolution, the well-described
perturbations in ruffling and macropinocytosis induced by inhibition or genetic
deletion of key regulators. These include the PI3K activity needed for
macropinosome completion and closure (Araki et
al., 1996) and the actions of phosphatidic acid (Bohdanowicz et al., 2013), ARF6 (Radhakrishna et al., 1999), Rac1 (Nobes and Marsh, 2000), SNX1 and SNX5
(Bryant et al., 2007; Lim et al., 2012), and F-actin assembly
proteins in ruffle formation.
Identification of Rab13 as a ruffle-associated small GTPase in activated
macrophages
We next set out to identify molecules that define the tent pole ruffle structures
on LPS-activated macrophages. To do so, we turned to Rab GTPases, which act as
switches at various stages of ruffles and macropinosomes. Since dorsal ruffles
are enriched in negatively charged lipids, which may contribute to membrane
recruitment (Heo et al., 2006), our
initial screen ranked Rabs by C-terminal charge, and a selection of Rabs were
expressed in macrophages as GFP-fusion proteins to measure ruffle localization
and enrichment. GFP-Rab13 emerged with the most pronounced enrichment in dorsal
ruffles, compared with a panel of other Rabs, including Rab8a, which is
transiently in macrophage ruffles (Luo et al.,
2014; Wall et al., 2017;
Fig. 4 A and Fig. S3 A). Although
Rab13 has not previously been characterized in macrophages, its known attributes
befit the context of ruffles, including its close relationship as a GTPase to
Rab8 (Ioannou and McPherson, 2016) and
its role in migration at the leading edge of cancer cells (Sun et al., 2010; Ioannou et al., 2015).
Figure 4.
Identification of active Rab13 in LPS-induced dorsal ruffles.
(A) Representative images of macrophages transiently
transfected with GFP-C1, GFP-Rab8a, and GFP-Rab13. Cell surfaces were
stained using TMR-WGA (red) and cells counter stained with DAPI (blue).
3D stacks were taken using the DeltaVision deconvolution microscope.
Inset images show examples of plasma membrane and ruffle regions used to
produce the quantification shown for the relative ruffle enrichment by
ratio of normalized mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) for both the
ruffle and resting regions. Quantification of ruffle enrichment is
displayed as mean ± SEM from n = 20 cells per Rab
over three independent experiments. Each cell had five independent
measurements for ruffles and for plasma membrane regions.
(B) 3D-SIM of macrophages stably expressing Halo-Rab13
(red) and GFP-LifeAct (green). Cells were fixed before counterstaining
with Halo-Ligand JF549 (10 nM), Rab13 localizes to ruffles (B
i) and to peripheral macropinosome-like structures (B ii).
(C) Rab13 activation assay. Cell lysates of myc-Rab13
expressing macrophages were analyzed for relative levels of active
Rab13. Cells were untreated or treated for 30 min with 100 ng/ml LPS.
Western blot is representative of three independent experiments.
GST-OCRL (RBD) pulldowns were probed with anti-myc to detect active
Rab13. Ponceau stain shows amount of GST-OCRL used as bait. Input cell
lysate was run on separate lanes to show total Rab13. Quantification of
Western blots are from three individual experiments and displayed as
mean ± SEM; *, P < 0.05, where the data are normalized to
nonstimulated GTP-Rab13 levels. (D) Schematics of Rab13
FRET biosensors and FRET measurements of whole cells expressing WT,
dominant negative (T22N), and constitutively active (Q67L) Rab13
biosensors transiently expressed in macrophages. FRET acceptor bleaching
score was calculated on n = 13, 7, and 3 for WT, Q67L,
and T22N, respectively, from three independent transfections. Graphs are
represented as mean ± SEM. (E) Macrophages transiently
expressing the WT Rab13 FRET biosensor were imaged using a Zeiss 710 LSM
confocal microscope. Boxed areas within bleached regions highlight
ruffles and nonruffle plasma membrane. Within the boxed areas, dotted
lines indicate example regions of interest used to calculate FRET
scores. Data presented as mean ± SEM; n = 6 cells.
Test for statistical significance was calculated using unpaired
t tests, where *, P < 0.05 and **, P < 0.01.
Bars: 10 µm (main panels); 5 µm (inset panels).
Identification of active Rab13 in LPS-induced dorsal ruffles.
(A) Representative images of macrophages transiently
transfected with GFP-C1, GFP-Rab8a, and GFP-Rab13. Cell surfaces were
stained using TMR-WGA (red) and cells counter stained with DAPI (blue).
3D stacks were taken using the DeltaVision deconvolution microscope.
Inset images show examples of plasma membrane and ruffle regions used to
produce the quantification shown for the relative ruffle enrichment by
ratio of normalized mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) for both the
ruffle and resting regions. Quantification of ruffle enrichment is
displayed as mean ± SEM from n = 20 cells per Rab
over three independent experiments. Each cell had five independent
measurements for ruffles and for plasma membrane regions.
(B) 3D-SIM of macrophages stably expressing Halo-Rab13
(red) and GFP-LifeAct (green). Cells were fixed before counterstaining
with Halo-Ligand JF549 (10 nM), Rab13 localizes to ruffles (B
i) and to peripheral macropinosome-like structures (B ii).
(C) Rab13 activation assay. Cell lysates of myc-Rab13
expressing macrophages were analyzed for relative levels of active
Rab13. Cells were untreated or treated for 30 min with 100 ng/ml LPS.
Western blot is representative of three independent experiments.
GST-OCRL (RBD) pulldowns were probed with anti-myc to detect active
Rab13. Ponceau stain shows amount of GST-OCRL used as bait. Input cell
lysate was run on separate lanes to show total Rab13. Quantification of
Western blots are from three individual experiments and displayed as
mean ± SEM; *, P < 0.05, where the data are normalized to
nonstimulated GTP-Rab13 levels. (D) Schematics of Rab13
FRET biosensors and FRET measurements of whole cells expressing WT,
dominant negative (T22N), and constitutively active (Q67L) Rab13
biosensors transiently expressed in macrophages. FRET acceptor bleaching
score was calculated on n = 13, 7, and 3 for WT, Q67L,
and T22N, respectively, from three independent transfections. Graphs are
represented as mean ± SEM. (E) Macrophages transiently
expressing the WT Rab13 FRET biosensor were imaged using a Zeiss 710 LSM
confocal microscope. Boxed areas within bleached regions highlight
ruffles and nonruffle plasma membrane. Within the boxed areas, dotted
lines indicate example regions of interest used to calculate FRET
scores. Data presented as mean ± SEM; n = 6 cells.
Test for statistical significance was calculated using unpaired
t tests, where *, P < 0.05 and **, P < 0.01.
Bars: 10 µm (main panels); 5 µm (inset panels).More detailed localization of Halo-Rab13 in activated macrophages was performed
by 3D–structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM) that revealed the
presence of Halo-Rab13 on intracellular vesicular membranes and on the plasma
membrane, where it is concentrated on F-actin–rich ruffles (Fig. 4 B, i). Perinuclear localization of
Halo-Rab13 is consistent with previous reports of Rab13 acting in post-Golgi
trafficking (Nokes et al., 2008).
Halo-Rab13 labeling appears on F-actin labeled endosomes in the cell periphery
(arrows, Fig. 4 B) and also on early
macropinosome-like structures, which are mostly devoid of F-actin (Fig. 4 B ii). Recruitment of Rab13 was
assessed during macropinocytosis by live cell imaging of mCherry-Rab13,
coexpressed with macropinosome-associated Rab5a or Rab8a (Lanzetti et al., 2004; Schnatwinkel et al., 2004; Wall et
al., 2017). In live cells, mCherry-Rab13 labeling is located on
ruffles and macropinosomes, gradually diminishing as the macropinosomes mature
and acquire GFP-Rab5a (Fig. S1 C). Rab8a is typically recruited to ruffles that
transition to early macropinosomes (Wall et
al., 2017), and we find Rab13 on ruffles overlapping with Rab8a
during the transition to a Rab5a-positive macropinosome (Fig. S1 D). Thus,
in fixed and live cells, Rab13 is prominent on large dorsal ruffles and on
early-stage macropinosomal membranes in LPS-treated macrophages.Stimulation of macrophages with LPS enhances ruffling and macropinocytosis (Patel and Harrison, 2008; Zanoni et al., 2011), and accordingly, it
increases the number of Halo-Rab13–labeled ruffles on activated cells. To
test whether LPS activates the GTPase Rab13, we used an activation assay based
on capture of GTP-Rab13 by a Rab-binding domain (RBD) from the Inositol
polyphosphate 5-phosphatase OCRL1, fused to GST (Wall et al., 2017). While there is a basal level of
active (GTP-bound) Rab13 in macrophages, this was increased (nearly doubled)
after LPS treatment, indicating that Rab13 nucleotide loading is part of the
Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)–driven response in macrophages (Fig. 4 C). Rab13 associates with membranes
in both a GDP- and GTP-bound state (Ioannou et
al., 2015, 2016). To
determine where Rab13 is most active after LPS stimulation we made use of our
previously described, Rab13 FRET-based biosensor, consisting of full-length WT
Rab13 coupled to the RBD of MICAL-L2 (Ioannou
et al., 2015). Independent biosensors containing Rab13T22N (inactive
mutant, GDP-bound) and Q67L (active mutant, GTP bound) were used to demonstrate
the dynamic range between inactive and active states (Fig. 4 D). FRET measurements calculated for both dorsal
ruffles and other plasma membrane regions in LPS-treated cells reveal a
significant elevation in Rab13 activity at dorsal ruffles (Fig. 4 E). Collectively, these results show that LPS
activates Rab13 and enhances the accumulation of active GTP-loaded Rab13 in
macrophage dorsal ruffles. This complements previous use of these biosensors,
which reveal that in breast cancer cells, active Rab13 accumulates on membrane
protrusions at the leading edge of migrating cells (Ioannou et al., 2015).
Rab13 regulates ruffling and formation of LPS-induced macropinosomes
To determine whether Rab13 has functional roles in ruffling and macropinocytosis,
we established imaged-based quantitative assays for these functions. Dorsal
ruffling was quantified as F-actin protrusions on the dorsal surface relative to
dorsal and total cell areas of a large number of fixed cells in an analysis that
revealed a 1.3-fold, LPS-induced increase in ruffling (Fig. S2, A and B). To
demonstrate how this ruffling affects downstream macropinocytosis, the fluid
phase tracer Alexa Fluor 555–Dextran was used to measure uptake (Fig. S2
C). Quantification of individual macropinosomes revealed a doubling of
macropinocytic uptake over a 10-min period after addition of LPS (Fig. S2 D),
representing enhanced capacity for membrane recycling and environmental sampling
in activated macrophages. Macropinosome size is also notably increased in LPS
treated cells, which have a higher proportion of large (designated as >1.3
µm2) versus small (<1.3 µm2)
macropinosomes (Fig. S2 E). This increase in the number of large macropinosomes
almost exclusively accounts for the overall increase in macropinocytic uptake,
as the number of small macropinosomes does not change after LPS treatment (Fig.
S2 E) and the number of cells with large macropinosomes increases (Fig. S2 F).
The LPS-induced population of large macropinosomes can also be seen in primary
bone marrow–derived macrophages (BMM) labeled with dextran (Fig. S2 G).
These enlarged organelles are in line with similar enlarged macropinosomes that
can be induced by growth factor stimulation of macrophages and that are distinct
from smaller, calcium-dependent, constitutive macropinosomes (Canton et al., 2016).Ruffling assays were performed on siRNA treated cells where Rab13 was knocked
down (by ∼75%) using three independent siRNAs (Fig. 5 A). In control cells, we observe a doubling in
dorsal F-actin projections after LPS treatment, but in Rab13-depleted cells
there is no LPS-induced increase in dorsal ruffles and little to no change in
ruffling in untreated cells (Fig. 5, B and
C). These results indicate a role for Rab13 in the formation of
LPS-induced dorsal ruffles. To analyze the downstream effect on
macropinocytosis, we generated CRISPR-mediated Rab13 knockout (KO; >90%
reduction in Rab13) and rescue (reexpression of myc-tagged Rab13 in KO line)
cell lines (Fig. S3, B–D). Before and after activation with LPS, cell
lines were tested using dextran uptake into the previously designated
populations of small (<1.3 µm2) versus large (>1.3
µm2) macropinosomes (Fig. 5,
D and E). Again, we did not see any increase in the total number of
small macropinosomes formed after LPS stimulation in control cells. The most
dramatic effect is that abolition of the LPS-induced increase in large
macropinosomes in Rab13 KO cells (Fig. 5
E). In the rescue cell lines, the number of large macropinosomes
returns to control levels, attributing this effect specifically to Rab13. When
calculated as total fluid uptake, the data show that LPS doubles fluid uptake by
the cells, and this capacity is driven by Rab13-mediated large macropinosomes
(Fig. S3 E). In Rab13 KO cells, there was also a smaller effect on constitutive
macropinosomes and a small increase in the rescue cell lines, which is most
likely due to some cells overexpressing Rab13 (Fig. S3, C and D). In these
CRISPR/Cas9-mediated KO cell lines the marked and predominant loss of the
LPS-induced large macropinosomes suggests an essential and selective role for
Rab13 in the formation of ruffles and large LPS-induced macropinosomes.
Figure 5.
Rab13 regulates dorsal ruffle formation and macropinocytosis in LPS
activated macrophages. (A) Real-time quantitative PCR
(qRT-PCR) from Rab13 siRNA treated cells using three independent siRNA
duplexes. Data are normalized to HPRT and represented as mean ±
SEM; n = 3 individual experiments; ****, P < 0.0001.
(B and C) Ruffle index assay described in the Materials
and methods to quantify ruffling on control and Rab13
siRNA–treated macrophages with and without LPS for 30 min.
F-Actin was stained with Alexa Fluor 488–phalloidin and 3D z
stacks imaged using a DeltaVision deconvolution microscope. Threshold
images of each channel were used for area measurements to generate the
Ruffle Index. Data presented as mean ± SEM of ≥10 cells in
multiple experiments. *, P < 0.05. (D) Macropinocytosis
assay. CRISPR cell lines (WT, Rab13 KO, and Rab13 Rescue) were
pretreated with or without 100 ng/ml LPS for 15 min before a 15-min
incubation with Alexa Fluor 555–dextran (100 µg/ml). Cell
membranes were stained with Alexa Fluor 488–WGA (not shown) to
segment cells (dotted lines indicate cell borders), and nuclei were
labeled with DAPI after fixation. (E) Macropinosome size
analysis. Numbers of small (<1.3 µm2) versus large
(>1.3 µm2) macropinosomes were calculated before and
after LPS stimulation in each cell line. Data are displayed as mean
± SEM with n ≥ 400 macropinosomes per
group. Tests for statistical significance were calculated using unpaired
t tests. (F) Control and Rab13 KO cell
lines stably expressing GFP-LifeAct were imaged by LLSM. Example frames
are displayed as an MIP using the ICA LUT in ImageJ (Video 10). Inset
region illustrates a full tent pole ruffling event for control and Rab13
KO cells displayed every 12 s. Tests for statistical significance was
calculated using unpaired t tests. Bars, 10 µm.
Time stamps, min:s.
Rab13 regulates dorsal ruffle formation and macropinocytosis in LPS
activated macrophages. (A) Real-time quantitative PCR
(qRT-PCR) from Rab13 siRNA treated cells using three independent siRNA
duplexes. Data are normalized to HPRT and represented as mean ±
SEM; n = 3 individual experiments; ****, P < 0.0001.
(B and C) Ruffle index assay described in the Materials
and methods to quantify ruffling on control and Rab13
siRNA–treated macrophages with and without LPS for 30 min.
F-Actin was stained with Alexa Fluor 488–phalloidin and 3D z
stacks imaged using a DeltaVision deconvolution microscope. Threshold
images of each channel were used for area measurements to generate the
Ruffle Index. Data presented as mean ± SEM of ≥10 cells in
multiple experiments. *, P < 0.05. (D) Macropinocytosis
assay. CRISPR cell lines (WT, Rab13 KO, and Rab13 Rescue) were
pretreated with or without 100 ng/ml LPS for 15 min before a 15-min
incubation with Alexa Fluor 555–dextran (100 µg/ml). Cell
membranes were stained with Alexa Fluor 488–WGA (not shown) to
segment cells (dotted lines indicate cell borders), and nuclei were
labeled with DAPI after fixation. (E) Macropinosome size
analysis. Numbers of small (<1.3 µm2) versus large
(>1.3 µm2) macropinosomes were calculated before and
after LPS stimulation in each cell line. Data are displayed as mean
± SEM with n ≥ 400 macropinosomes per
group. Tests for statistical significance were calculated using unpaired
t tests. (F) Control and Rab13 KO cell
lines stably expressing GFP-LifeAct were imaged by LLSM. Example frames
are displayed as an MIP using the ICA LUT in ImageJ (Video 10). Inset
region illustrates a full tent pole ruffling event for control and Rab13
KO cells displayed every 12 s. Tests for statistical significance was
calculated using unpaired t tests. Bars, 10 µm.
Time stamps, min:s.We next used LLSM imaging of both siRNA-depleted and CRISPR KO cells, each
expressing GFP-LifeAct to observe real time changes in ruffling induced by loss
of Rab13. Loss of Rab13 did not block ruffling per se, but significant changes
to ruffling behavior were evident (Fig. 5
F and Video 10). Whereas in activated control cells, there is typical
tent pole ruffling (Fig. 5 F, inset
panels), in Rab13 KO cells ruffling is defective. Specifically, tent poles are
still formed on the cell surface but these structures were less likely to erect
patent F-actin/membrane veils between them. Some tent poles erected incomplete
or smaller veils, but subsequent events like ruffle circularization and tent
pole twisting were seen much less often. To quantify these changes, we performed
segmentation of the brightest ruffling events and tracked the ruffle center of
mass to measure ruffle speed (average displacement/time), their displacement
(total distance moved), and ruffle duration (total time; Fig. S3, F and G). In
Rab13 depleted cells, a drop in both mean ruffle speed (from 4.4 to <3
µM/s2) and displacement (from 10 to 5 µM/s2)
are parameters that are consistent with the formation of smaller and less active
ruffles. Rab13-depleted cells still have ruffling and they retain most of their
capacity for making constitutive (small) macropinosomes. Collectively, this
evidence shows that Rab13 is required, not for tent pole formation, but for
subsequent, optimal formation, and patent behavior of the tent pole ruffles, and
it implicates these as causal steps in the specific loss of the large
LPS-induced macropinosomes seen in Rab13 depleted cells.Two potential mechanistic roles for Rab13 can be envisioned from these findings:
(1) control of F-actin polymerization or branching to form the ruffle veil or
(2) control of membrane trafficking to the plasma membrane at the site of ruffle
formation, which could deliver membrane into the large ruffle veil. Rab13 has
several effectors that could be involved in either of these functions and that
indirectly mediate actin polymerization in different settings, including
PKA/VASP at tight junctions in epithelial cells (Köhler et al., 2004) and MICAL-L2/actinin4 that
supports Glut4 trafficking (Sun et al.,
2016) and neurite outgrowth (Sakane
et al., 2010). In breast cancer cells, Rab13 is activated by DENND2B
in a complex with MICAL-L2 on leading edges for tumor metastasis (Ioannou et al., 2015; Ioannou and McPherson, 2016).
Rab35-recruited MICAL-L1 coalesces the roles of Rab13 alongside Rabs 8 and 36 in
neurite outgrowth (Kobayashi et al.,
2014). In lymphocytes, Mst1 phosphorylates and activates DENND1C, and
subsequently Rab13, to regulate integrin trafficking and cell motility (Nishikimi et al., 2014). Interestingly,
MyD88-dependent TLR signaling also regulates the Mst1–hippo pathway
(Hong et al., 2018; Zhang et al., 2018) and may provide a
link to Rab13 activity during TLR4 signaling and possibly macropinocytosis.
Thus, we anticipate that Rab13 will function on tent pole ruffles with a known
or new effector, in a sequence of Rab GTPases, and the identities of these
molecules are yet to be determined.LLSM can now be further used to determine the universality of tent pole ruffles,
beyond the macrophages and cancer cells shown here, where it may well be able to
discern functional or cell type adaptions or differences in behavior.
Interestingly, LLSM has been used in another study to look at ruffling and
macropinosome cup formation in Dictyostelium discoideum (Veltman et al., 2016). In this organism,
the macropinocytic cups were formed in a different manner, namely, from an
outwardly spreading patch of active Ras, Rac, and PIP3 that finally constricted
into a ring. This is distinct from the tent pole ruffles herein and from the
circularization of erect linear ruffles described previously in immune cells
(Welliver et al., 2011). However,
it is notable that Dictyostelium LLSM images shown by Veltman et al. (2016) do appear to have
ruffles with tent pole like structures. With the development of machine learning
tools and software for big image data, LLSM holds the potential to develop
mathematically defined 4D models to statistically interrogate molecular
components and functions of tent pole ruffles and macropinosomes.
Materials and methods
Antibodies and reagents
A primary antibody against GAPDH (5174) was purchased from Cell Signaling
Technology. Mouse anti-myc IgG was concentrated from a hybridoma supernatant
(9E10). Alexa Fluor 488–phalloidin (A12379), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)
488 (W11261) and tetramethylrhodamine (TMR; W849), DAPI (Dilactate; D3571), and
70,000 MW Oregon Green 488 (D7173) or 10,000 MW Alexa Fluor 555–Dextran
(D34679) were purchased from Life Technologies. HRP-conjugated goat anti-mouse
and anti-rabbit antibodies (81-6520) were obtained from Zymed Laboratories Inc.
LPS purified from Salmonella enterica serotype Minnesota Re 595
was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used at 100 ng/ml unless otherwise stated.
Gibson Assembly Master Mix was from New England Biolabs (E2611). The GeneArt
genomic cleavage detection kit (A24372) was from Invitrogen (Thermo Fisher
Scientific). JF549 coupled to Halo-ligand was used to label both live
and fixed cells at 10 nM and was provided by L. Lavis (Janelia, Ashburn, VA;
Grimm et al., 2015).
Cell culture
All experiments used the RAW 264.7 macrophage-like cell line from ATCC (-TIB71).
Unless otherwise stated, cells were maintained and passaged in RPMI 1640 medium
(Thermo Fisher Scientific) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated FCS (Thermo
Fisher Scientific) and 2 mM l-glutamine (Invitrogen) and kept at
37°C in humidified 5% CO2. Primary mouse BMMs used for dextran
uptake assays, were obtained from femur-derived bone marrow cells from C57BL/6
mice. Cells were ex vivo differentiated for 7 d in RPMI medium supplemented with
10% FBS, 20 U/ml penicillin, 20 µg/ml streptomycin, and 100 ng/ml purified
recombinant macrophage colony stimulating factor–1 (11343118; ImmunoTools
GmbH).
Plasmids and stable cell lines
pEGFP-C1 vector (Clontech) containing the open reading frames of mouseRab8a and
13, were gifts from M. Fukuda (Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan). Stable cell
lines were generated using the pEF6/V5-His TOPO TA vector (K961020) from Life
Technologies, and pEF1α-Halo-(neomycin) was generated by replacing the
cytomegalovirus promoter in pHTN HaloTag cytomegalovirus-neo vector (G7721) from
Promega with the EF-1α promoter by PCR and restriction ligation.
pEF1α-Halo-Rab13 was generated by PCR and ligation reaction using the
following primers: Halo-Rab13-EcoRI-F,
5′-GAATTCATGGCCAAAGCCTACGAC-3′; Halo-Rab13-EcoRV-R,
5′-AATTGGGCCCTCAGCCTAACAAGCACTTGT-3′. pEF1α-Halo-K-RasTail
and pEF1a-Halo-Rab5c were generated by Gibson assembly using the Gibson assembly
kit from NEB and Rab5c inserted by PCR ligation into the EcoRI and NotI sites in
the multiple cloning site. Rab5c was amplified using the following primers:
forward, 5′-ATATGAATTCATGGCGGGTCGAGGAGGT-3′; reverse,
5′-AATTGCGGCCGCTCAGTTGCTGCAGCACTG-3′. pEF6-myc-Rab13 was generated
by restriction digestion of the mouseRab13 ORF from peGFP-Rab13 using BsrGI and
BamHI and replacing the Rab8a ORF from a previously generated pEF6-myc-Rab8a
construct (unpublished data). pEF6-GFP-N1 was generated by cloning the GFP ORF
from pEGFP-N1 (Clonetech) and inserting into the pEF6 backbone. peGFP-LifeAct
and peGFP-2×FYVE were gifts from F. Meunier (University of Queensland,
Brisbane, Australia), and GFP-LifeAct was subcloned into pEF6-GFP-N1 by
restriction digestion. Cells were transfected with Lipofectamine 2000, and
stable cell lines were generated using either G418/neomycin (100 µg/ml)
and/or blasticidin (4 µg/ml). Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET)
biosensor constructs were provided by P. McPherson and L. Hodgson (Ioannou et al., 2015). Three biosensor
constructs consisted of WT Rab13, dominant negative mutant (T22N) Rab13, and
constitutively active mutant (Q67L) Rab13, fused at the N-terminus to Venus
(acceptor), a linker, mCer3 (donor), then the RBD of MICAL-L2.
siRNA knockdown and CRISPR/Cas9 gene KO
Knockdown of Rab13 by siRNA was performed using the Amaxa nucleofection system
and reagent V as per the manufacturer’s instructions (V VCA-1003) with
the Nucleofector 2b, program D-032. Stealth RNAi siRNA was from Invitrogen,
nontargeting control siRNA was humanHDAC1,
5′-GAACUACCCACUGCGAGACGGCAUU-3′; mouse siRNA Rab13 no. 1,
5′-CCGUGACAUCUUGCUCAAGACAGGA-3′; siRNA Rab13 no. 2,
5′-CCAAGAACGAUUCAAGACAAUAACU-3′; and siRNA Rab13 no. 3,
5′-GGCUCGAGAGCACAGAAUCCGAUU-3′. Cells were collected and
resuspended in 100 µl Amaxa Reagent V at a density of 2.5 ×
107/ml and 6 µl of 20 nM siRNA was used. Cells were seeded
onto plates for experimentation the following day at a density of 0.2 ×
106 /ml siRNA-treated cells.CRISPR/Cas9 stable KO cell lines were developed using homology-directed repair as
previously described (Wall et al.,
2017; Fig. S2). The ∼1,500-bp 5′ (left) and 3′
(right) homology arms flanking the CRISPR targeting site used the following
primers: Rab13_LA_F,
5′-TCGAGATTTAATTAAGATACGCGTGACGATACTGCCTTCTGTAAGCCTCTC-3′;
Rab13_LA_R,
5′-GAATAGGAACTTCGGTAAAGCTTATCCGATGGGAAGAGCCAACACTGGTA-3′;
Rab13_RA_F,
5′-CGGTATATATATATATATGTCGACATGGTTTCAAGTTGCTGCTCATCGGG-3′;
Rab13_RA_R,
5′-AGATCTGCGATCGCAATCAATTGCTGGTTAAACTGAAAGTGGGCCACCA-3′. gRNA
sequence was designed using the Zhang Lab CRISPR design tool. The gRNA for mouseRab13 (5′-ACGACCACCTCTTCAAGT-3′) was chosen, and oligos were
annealed and ligated into pSpCas9(BB)-2A-GFP (px458) from the Feng Zhang Lab at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (plasmid 48138; Addgene). Co-transfection
of each plasmid (5 µg) was performed using Amaxa nucleofection (Lonza), and
cells were selected with G418 (100 µg/ml) 24 h after transfection.
Rab13 activation assay
The Rab13 activation assay was previously described (Wall et al., 2017). In brief, a GST fusion protein of the
RBD of OCRL (amino acids 539–901) was used to pull down active GTP-loaded
Rab13 from a stable cell line expressing myc-tagged Rab13. MicroSpin columns
(27-3565-01; GE Healthcare) were used for all of the pulldowns. Beads were
washed with ice-cold lysis buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM
MgCl2, 1% NP-40, and 5% glycerol); cOmplete protease inhibitors
(Roche Applied Science) and phosSTOP tablets (Roche Applied Science) were added
to lysis buffer before use. Elution was achieved conventionally by boiling in
2× SDS-PAGE sample buffer for 5 min. The samples were subjected to
immunoblots. Total and active Rab13 is detected using anti-myc antibody from
input and pulldown extracts, respectively.
Cell culture for fluorescence microscopy
Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and permeabilized with 0.1% Triton
X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich) for antibody staining or labeling. For fixed cell assays,
cells were seeded on 1.5 coverslips at 0.2 × 106/ml for next day
experiments. For transfection the next day they were seeded at 0.1 ×
106/ml. For live cell experiments, transfected cells were seeded
onto glass-bottom 35-mm dishes (MatTek), and for LLSM experiments, cells were
seeded on 5-mm diameter coverslips (64- 0700; Warner Instruments).
Microscopy
Betzig LLSM (Chen et al.,
2014).
Custom built, lattice light sheet microscope by E. Betzig was housed at the
Advanced Imaging Center (AIC; Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia
Research Campus, Ashburn, VA). Excitation was achieved with 488-nm or 560-nm
diode lasers (MPB Communications) at 20–50% acousto-optic tunable
filter (AOTF) transmittance with 30-mW and 50-mW initial box power
(respectively) through an excitation objective (Special Optics 0.65 NA
3.74-mm water-dipping lens) and was detected via a Nikon CFI Apo LWD
25× 1.1 NA water-dipping objective with a 2.5× tube lens. Live
cells were imaged in 37°C-heated, water-coupled bath in L15 medium
(21083027; Life Technologies) with 5% FBS and Pen/Strep (10 µg/ml) and
were acquired with 2× Hamamatsu Orca Flash 4.0 V2 sCMOS cameras in
custom written LabView Software. Post-image deskewing and deconvolution was
performed using Janelia custom software and 10 iterations of the
Richardson-Lucy algorithm.
3i LLSM.
The 3i lattice light sheet microscope was used at the Institute for Molecular
Bioscience, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Excitation
was achieved with a Coherant Sapphire 500-mW, 488-nm laser, or 560-nm diode
lasers (MPB Communications) at 2–5% AOTF transmittance through an
excitation objective (Special Optics 28.6× 0.7 NA 3.74-mm water-dipping
lens) and is detected via a Nikon CFI Apo LWD 25× 1.1 NA water-dipping
objective with a 2.5× tube lens. Live cells were imaged in
37°C-heated, water-coupled bath in L15 medium (21083027; Life
Technologies) with 5% FBS and Pen/Strep (10 µg/ml) and were acquired
with 2× Hamamatsu Orca Flash 4.0 V2 sCMOS cameras in SlideBook.
Post-image deskewing and deconvolution was performed using Microvolution
Deconvolution software and 20 iterations of the Richardson-Lucy
algorithm.
Applied precision personal Deltavision.
Olympus IX80 inverted microscope fitted with an Olympus 60× 1.4 NA Plan
Apochromat objective, Lumencor 7 line LED light source, and Photometrics
CoolSnap HQ2 camera running SoftWorx. Post image processing was performed
using Applied Biosystems internal deconvolution software and 10 cycles of
the conservative algorithm.
Lin Shao 3D-SIM (Gustafsson et al.,
2008).
Custom Built 3D-SIM microscope using a Zeiss 100× 1.49 NA Plan-Fluar
objective, with 488- and 560-nm lasers. Five phase-shifted images were taken
per channel/z stack with the pattern generated with an spatial light
modulator, and images of cells in L15 medium (21083027; Life Technologies)
with 5% FBS and Pen/Strep (10 µg/ml) were acquired using 2× Orca
Flash 4.0 V2 sCMOS cameras using custom acquisition software.
Zeiss LSM 710 confocal with external GaAsP.
Zeiss Axiovert stand with a 710 LSM scanhead, with 63× 1.4 C-Apochromat
objective, and 458-, 488-, 514-, and 561-nm lasers, fitted with external
twin GaAsP detectors, running Zen Black 2012 software. Cells were maintained
at 37°C within a Peacon incubation chamber and imaged in
CO2-independent medium (18045088; Thermo Fisher Scientific) with 5% FBS and
Pen/Strep (10 µg/ml).
Zeiss LSM 880 confocal with Fast AiryScan.
Zeiss Axiovert stand with an 880 LSM scanhead with a 63× 1.4 NA Plan
Apochromat objective, and 488-, 561-, and 613-nm lasers with a Fast AiryScan
module, running Zen Black 2.3. Cells were imaged in CO2-independent medium
(18045088; Thermo Fisher Scientific) with 5% FBS and Pen/Strep (10
µg/ml).
Zeiss Axioimager with Apotome 2.
Upright Zeiss AxioImager microscope with Apotome 2, with 40× 1.3 NA Plan
Neofluar objective, coupled with HXP 120-W light source running Zen Blue 2
software.
Nikon TiE inverted wide field.
Custom designed, Nikon TiE inverted wide field system with 60× 1.4 NA
Plan Apochromat objective, and Lumencor 7 line LED light source, with
high-speed Sutter Instruments filter wheels and is housed in a 37°C OKO
laboratories incubation chamber, running NIS Elements AR 4.3. Cells were
imaged in CO2-independent medium (18045088; Thermo Fisher Scientific) with
5% FBS and Pen/Strep (10 µg/ml) using a Hamamatsu Orca Flash 4.0 sCMOS.
Post-image processing was performed using Microvolution Deconvolution
software and 20 cycles of the Richardson-Lucy algorithm.
Post-imaging visualization and analysis software
For LLSM data visualization and analysis, Amira version 4.6, Arivis Vision4D X64
and Imaris X64 version 9.2 software packages were used. For all other confocal
and wide field microscopy, post-imaging analysis and visualization was performed
using ImageJ (Fiji version 2.0.0-rc-68/1.52e).
Ruffling and macropinocytosis assays
For the ruffle index assay, RAW macrophages were incubated with or without LPS
100 ng/ml for 30 min before fixation. F-Actin was labeled with Alexa Fluor
488–phalloidin (Life Technologies), and nuclei were labeled with DAPI. 3D
z stacks were acquired and analyzed using ImageJ software. The nuclear mid-point
was selected (using DAPI), and the cell volumes below (cell area–F-actin)
and above (dorsal ruffle F-actin) were subjected to a maximum intensity
projection (MIP) and separated into red and green channels, respectively (see
Fig. S2). Each channel was background subtracted, and a median filter of two
pixels was applied. Each channel was then thresholded into a binary image, and
area measurements performed using ImageJ. The ruffle index was calculated as the
percentage of dorsal F-actin (pixel area)/cell (pixel area).For the ruffle enrichment assay, RAW cells on glass coverslips were transiently
transfected with selected GFP-Rabs and left overnight before LPS treatment and
fixation. Plasma membrane was stained with TMR-WGA, and cells were counter
stained with DAPI. Z stacks were acquired using the personal DeltaVision
microscope. Fluorescence intensities of GFP-Rabs and TMR-WGA were assessed at
both ruffles and “resting” regions of the plasma membrane and
expressed as ratios. Macropinosomes were labeled during 15-min incubation with
Alexa Fluor 555–dextran (100 µg/ml). Cells were fixed and
counterstained with 488-WGA and DAPI. Individual macropinosomes >0.2 µm
in diameter (Kerr and Teasdale, 2009)
were counted, and their areas were measured per cell using ImageJ.
Acceptor photobleaching analysis (FRET)
Acceptor photobleaching to measure the FRET efficiency of the Rab13 biosensors
has previously been described (Ioannou et al.,
2015). In brief, Rab13 imaging was performed using a Zeiss 710 LSM
confocal to acquire five images of the donor (Cerulean3) and acceptor (Venus)
channels before bleaching of the acceptor (Venus) channel by ≥50% with
the 514-nm laser. Five images were taken before and after a 10-iteration
bleaching protocol. Mean pixel gray levels of Cerulean were measured before and
after Venus bleaching to calculate the FRET efficiency according to the
equation:
qRT-PCR
Quantification of qRT-PCR has been described (Luo et al., 2014). In brief, Rab13 expression levels were analyzed
in siRNA-treated and CRISPR/Cas9 KO lines using the following primers:
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT),
5′-TCAGGCAGTATAATCCAAAGATGGT-3′ (forward) and
5′-AGTCTGGCTTATATCCAACACTTCG-3′ (reverse); mRab13,
5′-CGAACCGTGGACATAGAGGG-3′ (forward) and
5′-CCGCAGAGGCATTCTCTTTGA-3′ (reverse). RNA was extracted using
TRIzol (Life Technologies) as per manufacturer’s protocol. 1 µg of
purified RNA was used for cDNA synthesis using Superscript III (Life
Technologies) as per manufacturer’s instructions. cDNA was diluted in 200
µl of ultrapure dH2O. PCR was completed using SYBR green
(Applied Biosystems). ΔCT was calculated using Microsoft Excel and was
quantified using GraphPad Prism6.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using GraphPad Prism software package version
7.0. Data are presented as mean ± SEM unless otherwise stated. Datasets
were subject to normality tests (Shapiro-Wilk and Chi Squared) before performing
unpaired t test. Significance was calculated at P < 0.05 and
in general *, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001; ****, P <
0.0001. Where indicated in figure legends, before statistical analysis, data
were normalized to internal controls using calculations in Excel.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 shows (A) LLSM imaging of GFP-LifeAct in MDA-MB-231 cells and (B)
GFP-LifeAct and Halo-Kras-Tail in RAW 264.7 cells and wide field imaging of
mCherry-Rab13 with GFP-Rab5a and GFP-Rab8a. Fig. S2 contains the ruffle index
assay methodology and macropinocytosis assay and quantification from RAW 264.7
macrophages and examples from primary BMMs. Fig. S3 contains the Rab mini-screen
for ruffle enrichment, CRISPR-design strategy and quantification and imaging of
Rab13 KO and recovery cell lines. Fig. S3 E shows total macropinocytic uptake in
these cell lines. Fig. S3 (F and G) contains imaging and quantification of
ruffling in control and Rab13 siRNA–treated cells. Videos 1 and 2 show
LLSM of macrophage ruffling. Videos 3–5 show LLSM of tent pole ruffles.
Video 6 shows LLSM of tent pole–associated ruffle conversion to a
macropinosome. Video 7 show dual color LLSM of tent pole ruffle formation
(Halo-KRasTail/GFP-LifeAct). Video 8 shows dual color LLSM of tent pole ruffle
formation (Halo-Rab5c/GFP-LifeAct). Video 9 shows dual color rendering of LLSM
of tent pole ruffle formation (Halo-KRasTail/GFP-2×FYVE). Video 10 shows
LLSM of Rab13 CRISPR KO macrophages.
Authors: Lin Luo; Adam A Wall; Jeremy C Yeo; Nicholas D Condon; Suzanne J Norwood; Simone Schoenwaelder; Kaiwen W Chen; Shaun Jackson; Brendan J Jenkins; Elizabeth L Hartland; Kate Schroder; Brett M Collins; Matthew J Sweet; Jennifer L Stow Journal: Nat Commun Date: 2014-07-15 Impact factor: 14.919
Authors: Adam A Wall; Lin Luo; Yu Hung; Samuel J Tong; Nicholas D Condon; Antje Blumenthal; Matthew J Sweet; Jennifer L Stow Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2017-01-27 Impact factor: 5.157
Authors: Catherine M Buckley; Henderikus Pots; Aurelie Gueho; James H Vines; Christopher J Munn; Ben A Phillips; Bernd Gilsbach; David Traynor; Anton Nikolaev; Thierry Soldati; Andrew J Parnell; Arjan Kortholt; Jason S King Journal: Curr Biol Date: 2020-06-11 Impact factor: 10.834