Scavenger-receptor-mediated endocytosis of lipopolysaccharide in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.)
1 Department of Experimental Pathology, Institute of Medical Biology, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway and
2 Institute of Marine Biotechnology, The Norwegian College of Fishery Science, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway
*e-mail: torese{at}fagmed.uit.no
Accepted September 11, 2001
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Summary |
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Key words: lipopolysaccharide, scavenger receptor, endocytosis, endothelium, endocardium, Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua.
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Introduction |
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Studies performed in rabbit and rat have shown that circulating LPS is mainly distributed to the liver (Mathison and Ulevitch, 1979). The liver macrophages (Kupffer cells) are largely responsible for this clearance. Sinusoidal liver endothelial cells (sLECs) and parenchymal cells contribute to a lesser extent (Ruiter et al., 1981
; van Oosten et al., 1998
). Kupffer cells, the largest population of macrophages in mammals, are not found in cod liver (Morrison, 1987
). Nevertheless, the macrophages of fish, including cod, are thought to be important cells in disease resistance. They are phagocytic both in vivo (Ferguson, 1984
) and in vitro (Braun-Nesje et al., 1981
) and are considered to be the principal phagocytic cell in fish (Blazer, 1991
). Fish macrophages are also known to act as accessory cells in specific immune responses (Clem et al., 1985
; Miller et al., 1985
) and to participate in the regulation of immune responses by both producing (Ellsaesser and Clem, 1994
) and responding to (Francis and Ellis, 1994
; Graham and Secombes, 1990
; Secombes, 1987
) cytokine-like substances. Intravenous injection of S-type LPS into Atlantic cod (Dalmo et al., 1998
) demonstrated that LPS is taken up by the endocardial endothelial cells (EECs) of the heart.
The EECs lining the muscular trabecula of Atlantic cod heart represent a general vertebrate reticuloendothelial, or scavenger, cell type with the capacity to clear and degrade a number of physiological and foreign waste macromolecules from the circulation by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Functional studies indicate that cod EECs express a set of at least four types of endocytic receptors for this purpose: (i) the collagen receptor (Koren et al., 1997; Smedsrød et al., 1995
), (ii) the hyaluronan receptor (Seternes et al., 2001
), (iii) the mannose receptor (Sørensen et al., 2001
) and (iv) the scavenger receptor (Sørensen et al., 1998
).
Both mannose and scavenger receptors are considered to be involved in host defence mechanisms. The mannose receptor mediates endocytosis and phagocytosis of glycoproteins and particles containing terminal D-mannose, L-fucose and/or N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (Ezekowitz and Stahl, 1988). These residues are abundant at the terminal position of yeast and bacterial cell wall glycoproteins (Ezekowitz et al., 1990
; Ezekowitz and Stahl, 1988
). The scavenger receptors are involved in host defence as pattern recognition receptors. Because of their ability to bind to negatively charged macromolecules, they recognise surface constituents of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria as well as the intact bacteria (Dunne et al., 1994
; Hampton et al., 1991
). By expressing both mannose and scavenger receptors, the EECs may play a role in the innate immune defence system in cod in addition to clearing waste molecules from normal tissue turnover.
The bacterium Vibrio salmonicida is highly pathogenic in cod and salmon and occasionally causes significant losses in the Norwegian aquaculture industry. The dominant antigens of V. salmonicida are a 24 kDa surface protein and the LPS molecule (Bøgwald et al., 1990, 1991
). This LPS molecule is a so-called rough type (R type), composed of lipid A and an oligosaccharide moiety (Edebrink et al., 1996
). The aim of the present study was to determine whether EECs take up V. salmonicida LPS in vivo and in vitro and to investigate whether the scavenger receptor of the EECs is responsible for the endocytosis of this molecule.
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Materials and methods |
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Animals
Fish for in vivo studies, Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) (0.11.5 kg) were obtained from Tromsø Aquaculture Station (Norwegian Institute of Fisheries and Aquaculture Ltd, Tromsø, Norway). The fish were kept in plastic tanks (2000 l) supplied with running sea water at 8°C. All fish were adapted to the test conditions for at least 1 week before the experiments started and were fed a commercial diet daily before and during the adaptation and experimental period. For cell isolation, hearts from net-pen-captured Atlantic cod (14 kg) were used. The fish were kept in large dip nets in the sea (310°C) and fed a commercial diet. Male Sprague-Dawley rats, purchased from Charles River, Wiga, Germany, and fed a standard diet, weighed 200250 g when used in experiments.
Ligands for endocytosis studies
Formaldehyde-treated albumin (FSA) was prepared as described by Mego et al. (1967). Mannan, fucoidan and dextran sulphate were purchased from Sigma. Lipopolysaccharide from V. salmonicida was isolated according to the phenol:chloroform:petroleum ether method for R (rough) LPS of Galanos et al. (1969
).
Preparation of [125I]LPS
V. salmonicida LPS was modified and labelled with Na[125I] as described previously (Ulevitch, 1978). Briefly, the LPS primary amino groups were coupled to benzamidate esters (
-OH methylbenzimidate) at alkaline pH. The resulting LPS derivative was radiolabelled with carrier-free Na[125I] in a direct reaction using 1,3,4,6-tetrachloro-3
,6
-diphenylglycoluril (Iodogen; Pierce, Rockford, IL, USA) as oxidising agent according to instructions provided by the manufacturer. Free iodine was removed from the solution by gel filtration on a PD-10 column eluted with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The specific activity of the [125I]LPS was determined to be 3x106 cts min1 mg1. Radioactivity was measured using a Packard gamma counter (Packard Instrument Company, IL, USA). SDSPAGE and subsequent western blotting confirmed the purity of the [125I]LPS and its reactivity against antibodies.
Preparation of fluorescein-labelled LPS
Fluorescein-labelled LPS (F-LPS) was prepared as described previously (DeBelder and Granath, 1973). In brief, LPS (60 mg) from V. salmonicida was solubilised in borate-buffered dimethylsulphoxide (50 %; pH 9.8) to give a final concentration of 10 mg ml1. DTAF (0.5 mg mg1 LPS) was then added, and the reaction mixture was stirred for 48 h at room temperature (22°C) in the dark. The mixture was then extensively dialysed against 50 % dimethylsulphoxide for 2 days and thereafter against distilled water for 10 days. Finally, isolation of F-LPS was accomplished by Sephadex G-25 gel chromatography (PD-10). Its purity and reactivity against antibodies were confirmed by SDSPAGE and subsequent western blotting.
SDSPAGE and western blotting
SDSPAGE (Laemmli, 1970) was performed in a Bio-Rad mini-PROTEAN II electrophoresis cell using 10 % Ready Gels from Bio-Rad (40 min at 200 V). Electrophoresed samples were blotted electrophoretically to a Millipore PVDF membrane using a Bio-Rad Mini Transblot electrophoretic transfer cell (100 V for 1 h at 4°C). Blots were blocked in 3 % non-fat dry milk in 0.02 mol l1 Tris-HCl buffer at pH 7.5 containing 0.5 mol l1 NaCl and 0.3 % Tween 20 (TTBS) for 2 h at 22°C, and then incubated with monoclonal antibodies (7F3 and 2B5) reported to be specific for V. salmonicida LPS (Bøgwald et al., 1990
; Espelid et al., 1987
) in TTBS containing 3 % non-fat dry milk at 4°C overnight. The membranes were washed four times with TTBS and then incubated with a 1:10 000 dilution of rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulins conjugated with alkaline phosphatase (DAKO AS) in TTBS for 1 h at 22°C. The membranes were then washed four times with TTBS and twice in CDP-Star assay buffer (New England BioLabs, Beverly, MA, USA). Membranes were incubated with 1:500 CDP-Star substrate (New England BioLabs, Beverly, MA, USA) in assay buffer for 5 min and exposed to autoradiography film. Band densities on the developed film were measured using a Stratagene Eagle Eye II still video system.
Biological activity of native and modified LPS
The biological activity of purified native and modified V. salmonicida LPS was measured as its ability to induce TNF production by murine peritoneal macrophages. Balb/c male mice (Harlan, UK), 68 weeks old, were killed by CO2 suffocation. Resident peritoneal cells were harvested by lavage with 5 ml of ice-cold RPMI-1640 medium with synthetic serum replacement (SSR-II, Medicult, Copenhagen, Denmark). Cells were seeded at a density of 2x105 cells per well into 96-well plates (Falcon, Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA; catalog no. 353072) and cultured at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere containing 5 % CO2. After 2 h, non-adherent cells were washed off, and the adherent cells were cultured in 200 µl of SSR-II medium overnight. Next morning, fresh medium was added and the cells were incubated with V. salmonicida LPS (1 µg ml1) in its native form, with F-LPS or an LPS derivative or with Escherichia coli LPS (O26:B6 LPS; Difco Laboratories Inc. Detroit, MI, USA). Supernatants were collected 24 h after stimulation. Unstimulated cultures served as controls. The concentration of TNF
in the cell culture supernatants was measured using a commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit purchased from Biosource Europe, S.A. (Nivelles, Belgium).
Anatomical distribution
Twelve cod were anaesthetised by immersion in 0.004 % (w/v) benzocaine solution and injected intravenously with trace amounts of [125I]LPS (0.51 µg kg1 body mass) in a total injection volume of 200 µl of PBS per fish. At specified times, blood samples were collected from the caudal vein approximately 2 cm caudal to the injection site. The fish were killed by a blow to the head immediately after blood sampling, and the heart, anterior kidney, spleen, liver, intestine and blood were removed and analysed for radioactivity in a Packard gamma counter. The carcass of the fish, including the head, gills, muscle tissue and skin, was placed in a single tube and analysed for radioactivity. Parallel series of three fish were sampled 1, 4, 24 and 48 h after administration. As a control for accurate intravenous injection, the tissue at the injection site was excised and radioactivity was quantified in all fish. Total blood mass was taken as 5 % of body mass (Sørensen et al., 1998).
Inhibition studies were performed by co-injecting intravenously trace amounts of [125I]LPS (0.51 µg kg1 body mass) with unlabelled FSA (510 mg kg1 body mass) in a total injection volume of 500 µl of PBS per fish. Sixteen cod were used in this experiment; eight were injected with [125I]LPS/FSA and eight with [125I]LPS only. After 1 h, blood samples were collected from the caudal vein approximately 2 cm caudal to the injection site. The fish were killed by a blow to the head immediately after blood sampling. The heart, anterior kidney and liver and blood samples were removed and analysed for radioactivity in a Packard gamma counter.
Uptake of LPS by blood cells was investigated by density gradient sedimentation of whole blood after intravenous injection of [125I]LPS. Four cod were anaesthetised and injected intravenously with [125I]LPS (0.51 µg kg1 body mass) in a total injection volume of 600 µl of PBS per fish. Blood samples were collected (as described above) in heparin-coated tubes 1 h and 24 h after injection. A discontinuous gradient was made up of 4 ml of 34 % and 4 ml of 48 % Percoll density medium. Whole blood (2 ml) was loaded onto each density gradient for centrifugation at 400 g for 35 min at 4°C in a centrifuge equipped with a swing-out rotor (Kubota 8800, Kubota Corporation, Tokyo, Japan). After centrifugation, 10 fractions of 1 ml were collected from the gradients. Fractions 14 contained plasma, fractions 57 contained the 3448 % interface where leukocytes were trapped, and fractions 710 contained red blood cells. The fractions were analysed for radioactivity in a Packard gamma counter.
Immunohistochemistry
Vibrio salmonicida LPS was detected by immunohistochemistry 48 h after intravenous injection of LPS (2 mg kg1 body mass) into Atlantic cod. Paraffin sections were dewaxed in xylene and a graded series of alcohol concentrations and then hydrated by immersion in distilled water. The sections were then unmasked by boiling in 0.1 mol l1 citrate buffer, pH 6.0, for 25 min in a microwave oven or by treating them with trypsin (Gibco; 1:250) in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) for 10 min at room temperature. All the subsequent incubations were carried out at room temperature. After two washes of 10 min in TBS, the sections were incubated in TBS containing 30 % dried milk for 20 min and then in 7F3 monoclonal antibody (against V. salmonicida LPS), diluted 1:20 000, for 30 min. After rinsing in TBS, sections were incubated for 30 min with a biotinylated secondary antibody (rabbit anti-mouse Ig; DAKO AS, Glostrup, Denmark) and thereafter with avidin/biotin/alkaline phosphatase complex (Vectastain ABC-AP stain, Vector Laboratories Inc., Burlingame, Canada). Reaction products were visualised with Fast Red TR/naphthol AS-MX. Sections were counterstained with haematoxylin and mounted in Aquamont (Kebo Lab AS, Oslo, Norway). As a control for non-specific background staining, the primary antibody was omitted. Sections from fish not injected with LPS were used as a control for non-specific tissue binding of the primary antibody.
Isolation and cultivation of atrial EECs (aEECs)
Functionally intact aEECs from cod were purified according to Koren et al. (1997). In brief, the heart was dissected out and perfused with L-15 medium containing heparin (10 i.u. ml1). The atria were dissected free and cut open. Ostial tissue rich in fibrocytes and macrophages was discarded, and the remaining tissue was transferred to a 50 ml sterile plastic tube with 25 ml of calcium-free buffer (Smedsrød and Pertoft, 1985
). After a 30 min incubation with horizontal shaking (250 cycles min1), the buffer was changed. The atria were then incubated with the following solutions: trypsin (0.5 mg ml1) and EDTA (0.1 mg ml1) in PBS for 5 min followed by collagenase (0.5 mg ml1 in L-15 medium supplemented with 0.7 mg ml1 CaCl2·2H2O) for 30 min. The contents of the tube were then transferred to a sterile Petri dish, and the cell suspension thus obtained was used to flush the atrium several times with the jet from a 10 ml plastic syringe. The remaining tissue was discarded, the cell suspension was centrifuged for 5 min at 400 g and the pellet was resuspended in L-15. Contaminating macrophages (adherent cells) were removed according to the method of Sørensen et al. (1998
). The non-adherent cells were seeded on plastic (Falcon, Becton Dickinson & Company, NJ, USA) or glass tissue culture slides precoated with fibronectin (0.5 mg ml1). The incubation medium was L-15 supplemented with 10 % foetal calf serum. The isolation procedure and incubations were carried out at 1214°C. The cells were washed with L-15 medium after 24 h and used in experiments the same day or the next day. The number of cells seeded per 2 cm2 was approximately 106. Contamination by cardiomyocytes and a few macrophages was observed. On average, more than 90 % of the cells were aEECs, as evaluated by morphological characteristics.
Isolation of rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (sLECs)
Rat sLECs were prepared as described previously (Smedsrød et al., 1985). Briefly, rat livers were perfused with collagenase, and the resulting suspension of single cells was subjected to low-speed centrifugation followed by sedimentation in Percoll gradients. The resulting non-parenchymal cells were suspended in serum-free RPMI 1640 tissue culture medium and seeded in dishes (for endocytosis studies) or on coverslips (for morphology studies) coated with fibronectin by exposing the growth surface for a few seconds to a solution of 0.5 mg ml1 fibronectin. After initial attachment and washing, the resulting cultures contained more than 90 % sLECs.
Endocytosis of LPS by cultured cod aEECs and rat LECs
Atrial EEC cultures established in 2 cm2 wells (approximately 3x105 cells attached and spread per cm2) were washed several times with L-15 medium and supplied with fresh medium containing 1 % human serum albumin (HSA) and trace amounts of [125I]LPS (20x103 cts min1) in a total incubation volume of 200 µl per well. Incubations of [125I]LPS at 12°C were terminated after various times by removing the incubation medium and washed once with 500 µl of PBS. The incubation medium was then transferred to a PD-10 column and eluted with PBS. Fractions of 0.5 ml were collected. Intact ligand eluted in the void volume and degraded ligand eluted in the total volume. Cell-associated ligand was quantified by solubilising the cell layer with 1 % SDS, followed by counting in a gamma counter. Intracellular degradation was determined by solubilising cells after a 48 h continous incubation with trace amounts of [125I]LPS in 1 % SDS in PBS. The solubilised cells were then transferred to a PD-10 column and eluted with PBS. Fractions of 1 ml were collected. Eluted fractions were analysed in a gamma counter.
The effect of LPS on aEEC viability was investigated in culture. Cultures of aEECs were incubated with or without 10 µg ml1 native V. salmonicida LPS for 0, 24 or 48 h at 12°C. The reduction in cell viability during the experimental period was measured by staining cell nuclei for 30 min with 0.1 % Crystal Violet after a 15 min fixation in 1 % glutaraldehyde (Gillies et al., 1986). The amount of dye was quantified by solubilising the absorbed dye in a 0.2 % solution of Triton X-100 and determining optical density. The absorbance was measured at 590 nm.
Receptor-specific endocytosis of [125I]LPS was examined by inhibition studies. Monolayer cultures were incubated for 2 h with trace amounts of 125I-labelled ligand alone (control) or together with excess amounts of unlabelled macromolecules (100 µg ml1). Endocytosis experiments were terminated after 2 h at 1214°C by removing the incubation medium and one washing volume of 500 µl of PBS to a PD-10 column. Intact ligand eluted in the void volume and degraded ligand in the total volume. Cell-associated ligand was quantified by solubilising the cell layer with 1 % SDS, followed by counting in a gamma counter.
Fluorescence microscopy of EECs following administration of F-LPS
Cultures of aEECs were established on glass coverslips as described above. The cultures were incubated with F-LPS (1050 µg ml1) for 2 h at 1214°C and then fixed in 2.5 % glutaraldehyde and embedded in an antifading medium (Dako Fluorescent mounting medium, Glostrup, Denmark). The specific fluorescence due to F-LPS was observed as a bright green to yellow colour. Sections were examined using a Zeiss Axiophot photomicroscope equipped with incident-light fluorescence optics (Carl Zeiss, Obercochen, Germany). Pictures were taken on Kodak 64T or Ectachrome EPL 800 film (Kodak, Tokyo, Japan).
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Results |
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The biological activity of different preparations of LPS was measured as their ability to induce TNF production by murine peritoneal macrophages. Monitoring of TNF
production revealed that modified V. salmonicida LPS and native LPS from either V. salmonicida or E. coli stimulated the murine peritoneal macrophages to produce similar levels of TNF
. No TNF
was produced in the absence of LPS (Fig. 1).
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One hour after intravenous injection of trace amounts of [125I]LPS, the content of radioactivity was highest in the atrium and ventricle when expressed as cts min1 g1 tissue. The high atrium to blood and ventricle to blood ratios (16.8:1 and 11.3:1) compared with the much lower ratios in liver, anterior kidney and spleen (0.2:1, 1.1:1 and 0.8:1 respectively) (Table 1), indicate a very effective uptake mechanism for LPS in the heart. Injection of [125I]LPS together with excess amounts of unlabelled FSA effectively blocked uptake of radiotracer by the heart. It should be noted that the tissue to blood ratio of radioactivity in other organs was not significantly influenced by co-injection with FSA, indicating that FSA and LPS compete for the same specific receptor in heart tissue only.
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Cellular distribution of native LPS
The use of monoclonal anti-native-LPS antibodies to stain tissue sections prepared from fish that had been injected with native LPS revealed the presence of LPS in endocardial cells in both the atrium (Fig. 3A) and the ventricle (Fig. 3B) 48 h after injection. LPS was also detected in cells of the interstitium of the anterior kidney (Fig. 3C) and spleen (results not shown) 48 h after administration.
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Discussion |
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The present results reveal that the uptake of trace amounts (micrograms) of R-type V. salmonicida [125I]LPS after intravenous administration is greatest in the cod heart, where approximately 40 % of the total recovered radioactivity was found. The specific radioactivity in the heart tissue was 2150x103 cts min1 g1 tissue after 48 h. The amounts of radioactivity found in spleen, liver, head kidney and intestine were lower compared with the amounts found in the heart. The total amount of radioactivity found in the carcass was high, but the specific radioactivity was less than 3x103 cts min1 g1 tissue. Dalmo et al. (1998) investigated the specific uptake of tritiated S-type LPS after intravenous injection of a relatively high dose (milligrams) in Atlantic cod. They found a high specific radioactivity in the heart, spleen and kidney, but they did not report the total amount of radioactivity recovered from these organs.
Distribution studies performed in rabbit and rat have shown that circulating LPS is taken up mainly in the liver (Mathison and Ulevitch, 1979). The Kupffer cells of these mammals are largely responsible for the clearance, while sLECs and parenchymal cells contribute to a lesser extent (Ruiter et al., 1981
; van Oosten et al., 1998
). Kupffer cells constitute 8090 % of the total fixed macrophages in the mammalian body (Phillips, 1989
). Unlike mammals, most fish that have been investigated seem to lack a resident sinusoidal macrophage population in the liver (Speilberg et al., 1994
). The anterior kidney of Atlantic cod and other teleosts is a haematopoietic organ and a rich source of macrophages (Braun-Nesje et al., 1981
; Sørensen et al., 1997
). The fact that only 1.7 % of the total radioactivity was recovered from the anterior kidney of cod 48 h after injection of trace amounts of [125I]LPS suggests that cod macrophages, in contrast to mammalian macrophages, play a minor role in the clearance of [125I]LPS. Analysis of blood 24 h after injection of [125I]LPS demonstrated that the blood fraction containing leukocytes was associated with only a minor amount of the total radioactivity found in blood. The level of radioactivity was fairly stable over the experimental period (24 h), indicating that migration and recruitment of leukocytes containing LPS from other organs/sites into the general circulation was unlikely to have occurred.
When trace amounts of [125I]LPS were co-injected with excess amounts of unlabelled FSA, the tissue to blood ratios measured after 1 h in the atrium and ventricle were reduced by more than 95 %, indicating that uptake of LPS in the heart is largely mediated via the scavenger receptor. The amount of radioactivity in all the other internal organs was lower than that in the blood in all experiments. The cod heart is the most important scavenger organ for circulating FSA and amino-terminal propeptides of type I procollagen (PINP), both of which represent ligands for the scavenger receptor (Sørensen et al., 1998). Sørensen et al. observed an increase in liver-associated radioactivity when trace amounts of [125I]FSA were co-injected with excess amounts of unlabelled FSA or F-FSA. On the basis of this finding, they suggested an alternative route of uptake of FSA in cod liver. They also suggested that the liver receptor, in comparison with the heart receptor, may have a lower affinity, but larger capacity, for scavenger receptor ligands. In contrast, our results indicate that the [125I]LPS that is not cleared by the heart is not cleared by the liver since the tissue to blood ratio in liver is less than 1 over the entire experimental period.
The cellular localisation of LPS was investigated by injection of native LPS and subsequent detection by immunohistochemistry. Immunostaining could be seen in EECs of the atrium and ventricle. Immunostaining was also detected in macrophage-like cells in the anterior kidney, albeit to a much lesser extent than in heart. Part of this uptake may reflect phagocytosis of LPS aggregates or uptake of complement-C3-bound LPS by macrophages since LPS is a known activator of the fish complement pathways (Boesen et al., 1999). In addition, the rather high dose of LPS injected in these experiments to ensure immunohistochemically detectable levels would certainly have saturated the uptake mechanism in the EECs, causing significant amounts of LPS to circulate for an extended period. Opportunistic and less specific uptake mechanisms in anterior kidney cells may therefore come into action. The cellular localisation of R-type LPS observed in the present study corresponds to the distribution of Aeromonas salmonicida S-type F-LPS in cod reported by Dalmo et al. (1998
).
In vitro studies performed in pure cultures of cod aEECs demonstrated that F-LPS was internalised under serum-free conditions. Fluorescence was observed in discrete vesicles in all aEECs following a 1 h incubation. These structures probably represent endocytic vesicles. The observation that the in vitro uptake of [125I]LPS was effectively inhibited by excess amounts of scavenger receptor ligands supports the idea that LPS is taken up via the scavenger receptor expressed by these cells. Sørensen et al. (1998) demonstrated that the uptake of the scavenger receptor ligands FSA and PINP was inhibited by co-incubation of excess amounts of FSA. Work done by Shnyra and Lindberg (1995
) and van Oosten et al. (1998
) in purified cultures of sLECs from the rat liver have demonstrated that these cells are able to bind and internalise Salmonella minnesota R595 lipopolysaccharide in vitro. Their results showed that polyanions were potent inhibitors of [125I]LPS binding and that their inhibitory effect resulted from the interactions between these polymers and membrane LPS-binding sites. They suggested that a scavenger receptor was responsible for cellular binding of LPS to sLECs. In our hands, inhibition studies with Vibrio salmonicida [125I]LPS in sLECs confirmed these results.
Studies in mammals have shown that CD14, the macrophage scavenger receptors and toll receptors on the surface of monocytes and macrophages bind the lipid A moiety of LPS (Aderem and Ulevitch, 2000). Toll receptors, at least, are capable of initiating signals to the cell, resulting in the activation of various functions such as phagocytosis, endocytosis and bactericidal defence (Aderem and Ulevitch, 2000
). The mammalian scavenger receptor does not appear to function as a signalling receptor for LPS. Rather, it has been proposed that this receptor plays a protective role in host defence by scavenging potentially harmful substances such as LPS and, thereby, reducing the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines (Fenton and Golenbock, 1998
). At present, it is not known whether fish possess LPS receptors apart from the scavenger receptors, and the absence of LPS receptors to mediate intracellular activation may explain their observed tolerance to endotoxin (Berczi et al., 1966
).
The uptake of [125I]LPS by aEECs in vitro was rapid, with approximately 13 % of the added [125I]LPS being taken up after 1 h and 41 % by 24 h. Further incubation did not increase the amount of cell-associated radioactivity. The rate of uptake of [125I]LPS during the first 24 h is similar to that of [125I]PINP via the cod aEEC scavenger receptor, but slower than endocytosis of [125I]FSA by the same receptor (Sørensen et al., 1998). The corresponding values for [125I]FSA were 25 % after 1 h and 75 % after 6 h of incubation. The uptake of [125I]PINP was slower than for [125I]FSA (4 % after 1 h and 55 % after 24 h).
Recent studies in our laboratory showed that as much as 45 % of added [125I]FSA and [125I]PINP were degraded and recovered as low-molecular-mass products in the medium after 24 h of incubation with cultured aEECs (Sørensen et al., 1998). Against this background, it is interesting to note that we observed practically no degradation of [125I]LPS, even after 48 h of incubation. Although deacetylation of the lipid A moiety of LPS has been observed in mammalian macrophages and granulocytes (Munford and Hall, 1985
, 1986
), complete enzymatic degradation of LPS in vertebrate cells is unlikely because of the absence of hydrolases with specificities for the microbial sugar and peptidoglycan linkages of LPS. This, together with reports that immunoreactive LPS can be detected immunohistochemically in mammalian and fish tissues several weeks after injection of LPS (Ge et al., 1994
; Lamers and Pilarczyk, 1982
), fits well with our observation that only minor amounts of [125I]LPS was degraded in cultured aEECs even after 48 h of incubation.
The uptake of [125I]LPS by cultured aEECs levelled off after 24 h, and no further uptake was observed over the next 24 h of incubation. We speculate that, if the aEECs lack the capability to degrade [125I]LPS, this will cause a saturation of the endocytic capacity of the aEECs either by inhibiting the recirculation of receptor molecules, and thereby reducing the number of receptors on the cell surface, or by blocking other parts of the endocytic apparatus. Results from rat sLECs have demonstrated that endocytosis of advanced glycation end-products via the sLEC scavenger receptor results in a reduced ability to endocytose scavenger receptor ligands in general (Hansen et al., 2000). Further experiments are under way in our laboratory to investigate whether accumulation of LPS in aEECs may affect the general scavenger function of these cells. Nuclear staining and subsequent cell counting of aEECs incubated with 10 µg ml1 LPS for 48 h showed that normal cell numbers were present in the wells. This indicates that LPS was not toxic for the cells and that the reduced uptake cannot be explained by cell death.
In conclusion, our results indicate that the population of EECs is capable of taking up LPS from the circulation of the Atlantic cod and that LPS is internalised in a scavenger-receptor-dependent manner both in vivo and in cultures of aEECs. Moreover, these cells, which degrade an array of endocytosed macromolecules, are unable to degrade LPS.
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Acknowledgments |
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