Abstract
AbstractNeutrophils – the first responders in innate immunity – perform a variety of effector functions associated with specific metabolic demand. To maintain fitness and support functions, neutrophils have been found to utilize extracellular glucose, intracellular glycogen, and other alternative substrates. However, the quantitative contribution of these nutrients under specific conditions and the relative dependence of various cell functions on specific nutrients remain unclear. Here, usingex vivoandin vivoisotopic tracing, we reveal that under resting condition, human peripheral blood neutrophils, in contrast toin vitrocultured human neutrophil-like cell lines, rely on glycogen as a major direct source of glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway. Upon activation with a diversity of stimuli, neutrophils undergo a significant and often rapid nutrient preference shift, with glucose becoming the dominant metabolic source thanks to a multi-fold increase in glucose uptake mechanistically mediated by the phosphorylation and translocation of GLUT1. At the same time, cycling between gross glycogenesis and glycogenolysis is also substantially increased, while the net flux favors sustained or increased glycogen storage. The shift in nutrient utilization impacts neutrophil functions in a function-specific manner. The activation of oxidative burst specifically depends on the utilization of extracellular glucose rather than glycogen. In contrast, the release of neutrophil traps can be flexibly supported by either glucose or glycogen. Neutrophil migration and fungal control is promoted by the shift away from glycogen utilization. Together, these results quantitatively characterize fundamental features of neutrophil metabolism and elucidate how metabolic remodeling shapes neutrophil functions upon activation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
4 articles.
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