| Literature DB >> 34282551 |
J Merz1, A Nettesheim1, S von Garlen1, P Albrecht1, B S Saller2,3, J Engelmann1, L Hertle1, I Schäfer1, D Dimanski1, S König1, L Karnbrock1, K Bulatova1, A Peikert1, N Hoppe1, I Hilgendorf1, C von Zur Mühlen1, D Wolf1, O Groß2,3,4,5, C Bode1, A Zirlik6, P Stachon7.
Abstract
Extracellular nucleotides act as danger signals that orchestrate inflammation by purinergic receptor activation. The expression pattern of different purinergic receptors may correlate with a pro- or anti-inflammatory phenotype. Macrophages function as pro-inflammatory M1 macrophages (M1) or anti-inflammatory M2 macrophages (M2). The present study found that murine bone marrow-derived macrophages express a unique purinergic receptor profile during in vitro polarization. As assessed by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), Gαs-coupled P1 receptors A2A and A2B are upregulated in M1 and M2 compared to M0, but A2A 15 times higher in M1. The ionotropic P2 receptor P2X5 is selectively upregulated in M1- and M2-polarized macrophages. P2X7 is temporarily expressed in M1 macrophages. Metabotropic P2Y receptors showed a distinct expression profile in M1 and M2-polarized macrophages: Gαq coupled P2Y1 and P2Y6 are exclusively upregulated in M2, whereas Gαi P2Y13 and P2Y14 are overexpressed in M1. This consequently leads to functional differences between M1 and M2 in response to adenosine di-phosphate stimulation (ADP): In contrast to M1, M2 showed increased cytoplasmatic calcium after ADP stimulation. In the present study we show that bone marrow-derived macrophages express a unique repertoire of purinergic receptors. We show for the first time that the repertoire of purinergic receptors is highly flexible and quickly adapts upon pro- and anti-inflammatory macrophage differentiation with functional consequences to nucleotide stimulation.Entities:
Keywords: Macrophages; Polarization; Purinergic receptor: Inflammation
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34282551 PMCID: PMC8410913 DOI: 10.1007/s11302-021-09798-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Purinergic Signal ISSN: 1573-9538 Impact factor: 3.765
Fig. 1Purinergic receptor expression in bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) from C57Bl6/J mice. Flow cytometric analysis of a directly isolated bone marrow and b differentiated 7 days with 30 ng/ml M-CSF. Lineage describes a combination of antibodies recognizing CD3, CD19, Ly6G, and NK1.1, respectively. Macrophages are characterized as CD45+, CD11b+, and F4/80+ and lineage negative population. c Real-time PCR purinergic receptor and ectonucleotidase expression profile of unstimulated BMDMs described as 2-dCt values. Red dotted lines visualize the threshold of very low expressional levels. n.d., not detectable
Fig. 2Expression of specific M1/M2 markers upon pro- and anti-inflammatory differentiation as well as P1 and ectonucleotidases in unstimulated M0 compared to differentiated M1 and M2 macrophages. a Real-time PCR detection described as ddCt fold increase of specific M1/M2 markers in BMDMs stimulated for 5 h with 10ng/ml IFNγ + 100 ng/ml LPS (red, striped bars) for M1 differentiation and 5 h with 20ng/ml IL-4 (green bars) for M2 differentiation. BMDMs which only received medium for 5 h (white bars) are described as M0 macrophages and serve as reference value for the ddCt fold increase comparison. b Real-time PCR expression described as ddCt fold increase referred to M0 expression (white bars) compared to M1 (red, striped bars)- and M2 (green bars)-differentiated macrophages. n.d., not detectable; b.t., below threshold; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001
Fig. 3Ionotropic P2X expression in M1-/M2-differentiated macrophages compared to unstimulated M0 macrophages and the impact on inflammasome activation. BMDMs stimulated for 5 h with 10ng/ml IFNγ + 100 ng/ml LPS are described as M1 macrophages (red, striped bars) and BMDMs simulated for 5 h with 20ng/ml IL-4 are described as M2 macrophages (green bars). BMDMs which only received medium for 5 h (white bars) are described as M0 macrophages. a Real-time PCR expression of P2X purinergic receptors in M1-/M2-differentiated macrophages described as ddCt fold increase referred to M0 expression levels. b P2X7 ddCt fold change expression levels over time compared to P2X7 expression at time-point t = 0min in M0 macrophages. c–e representative flow cytometry dot-blots of 48h stimulated c M0, d M1, and e M2 macrophages. f Quantification of the P2X7-positive population in percentage of all BMDMs. g Western blot analysis of 6h and 24h differentiated M0, M1, and M2 macrophages with h normalized quantification to β-actin and in relation to M0 macrophages. i Inflammasome activation measured by caspase-1 Glo assay in short-time (3h) and long-time (12h) 100ng/ml LPS primed macrophages and subsequent 5 mM ATP stimulation. b.t., below threshold; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001
Fig. 4Metabotropic P2Y expression in M1-/M2-differentiated macrophages compared to unstimulated M0 macrophages. BMDMs stimulated for 5 h with 10ng/ml IFNγ + 100 ng/ml LPS are described as M1 (red, striped bars) and BMDMs simulated for 5 h with 20ng/ml IL-4 are described as M2 macrophages (green bars). BMDMs which only received medium for 5 h (white bars) are described as M0 macrophages. a Real-time PCR expression of Gq-coupled P2Y purinergic receptors (P2Y1, P2Y2, P2Y4, and P2Y6) in M1-/M2-differentiated macrophages described as ddCt fold increase referred to M0 expression levels. b Real-time PCR expression of Gi-coupled P2Y purinergic receptors (P2Y12, P2Y13, and P2Y14) in M1-/M2-differentiated macrophages described as ddCt fold increase referred to M0 expression levels. c Flow cytometric P2Y1-dependent histogram of 24h differentiated M0 (black-lined), M1 (red-lined), and M2 (green-lined) macrophages. d Quantification of the P2Y1-dependent mean-fluorescence intensity of M0, M1, and M2 macrophages after differentiation timepoints 6h, 24h, and 48h. e–g Gating strategy of P2Y1-dependent M1 and M2 distinction. e Debry-exclusion gating via cell size (FSC) and granularity (SSC). f Single cell gating via FSC-A (area) and FSC-H (height). g M1 and M2 distinction via the cell surface antigen P2Y1. b.t., below threshold; *** p < 0.001
Fig. 5Calcium flux assay in M1 and M2 macrophages upon ADP stimulation. BMDMs stimulated for 5 h with 10ng/ml IFNγ + 100 ng/ml LPS are described as M1 (red dots) and BMDMs simulated for 5 h with 20ng/ml IL-4 are described as M2 macrophages (green dots). Representative pictures of M1 and M2 macrophages loaded with fluo-4 AM a prior and b after 200 mM ADP stimulation. c Quantification of fluo-4 AM fluorescence intensity over time upon 200 mM ADP stimulation in M1 (red dots) and M2 (green dots) macrophages