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Publication : Regulation of macrophage motility by the water channel aquaporin-1: crucial role of M0/M2 phenotype switch.

First Author  Tyteca D Year  2015
Journal  PLoS One Volume  10
Issue  2 Pages  e0117398
PubMed ID  25719758 Mgi Jnum  J:226292
Mgi Id  MGI:5696714 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0117398
Citation  Tyteca D, et al. (2015) Regulation of macrophage motility by the water channel aquaporin-1: crucial role of M0/M2 phenotype switch. PLoS One 10(2):e0117398
abstractText  The water channel aquaporin-1 (AQP1) promotes migration of many cell types. Although AQP1 is expressed in macrophages, its potential role in macrophage motility, particularly in relation with phenotype polarization, remains unknown. We here addressed these issues in peritoneal macrophages isolated from AQP1-deficient mice, either undifferentiated (M0) or stimulated with LPS to orientate towards pro-inflammatory phenotype (classical macrophage activation; M1). In non-stimulated macrophages, ablation of AQP1 (like inhibition by HgCl2) increased by 2-3 fold spontaneous migration in a Src/PI3K/Rac-dependent manner. This correlated with cell elongation and formation of lamellipodia/ruffles, resulting in membrane lipid and F4/80 recruitment to the leading edge. This indicated that AQP1 normally suppresses migration of resting macrophages, as opposed to other cell types. Resting Aqp1-/- macrophages exhibited CD206 redistribution into ruffles and increased arginase activity like IL4/IL13 (alternative macrophage activation; M2), indicating a M0-M2 shift. In contrast, upon M1 orientation by LPS in vitro or peritoneal inflammation in vivo, migration of Aqp1-/- macrophages was reduced. Taken together, these data indicate that AQP1 oppositely regulates macrophage migration, depending on stimulation or not by LPS, and that macrophage phenotypic and migratory changes may be regulated independently of external cues.
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