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Endothelial Lactate Controls Muscle Regeneration from Ischemia by Inducing M2-like Macrophage Polarization
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4605635
Author(s) Zhang, Jing; Muri, Jonathan; Fitzgerald, Gillian; Gorski, Tatiane; Gianni-Barrera, Roberto; Masschelein, Evi; D'Hulst, Gommaar; Gilardoni, Paola; Turiel, Guillermo; Fan, Zheng; Wang, TongTong; Planque, Mélanie; Carmeliet, Peter; Pellerin, Luc; Wolfrum, Christian; Fendt, Sarah-Maria; Banfi, Andrea; Stockmann, Christian; Soro-Arnáiz, Inés; Kopf, Manfred; De Bock, Katrien
Author(s) at UniBasel Banfi, Andrea
Year 2020
Title Endothelial Lactate Controls Muscle Regeneration from Ischemia by Inducing M2-like Macrophage Polarization
Journal Cell metabolism
Volume 31
Number 6
Pages / Article-Number 1136-1153.e7
Keywords MCT1; angiogenesis; angriocrine signals; endothelial cells; ischemia; lactate; macrophage polarization; metabolism; muscle regeneration
Abstract Endothelial cell (EC)-derived signals contribute to organ regeneration, but angiocrine metabolic communication is not described. We found that EC-specific loss of the glycolytic regulator pfkfb3 reduced ischemic hindlimb revascularization and impaired muscle regeneration. This was caused by the reduced ability of macrophages to adopt a proangiogenic and proregenerative M2-like phenotype. Mechanistically, loss of pfkfb3 reduced lactate secretion by ECs and lowered lactate levels in the ischemic muscle. Addition of lactate to pfkfb3-deficient ECs restored M2-like polarization in an MCT1-dependent fashion. Lactate shuttling by ECs enabled macrophages to promote proliferation and fusion of muscle progenitors. Moreover, VEGF production by lactate-polarized macrophages was increased, resulting in a positive feedback loop that further stimulated angiogenesis. Finally, increasing lactate levels during ischemia rescued macrophage polarization and improved muscle reperfusion and regeneration, whereas macrophage-specific mct1 deletion prevented M2-like polarization. In summary, ECs exploit glycolysis for angiocrine lactate shuttling to steer muscle regeneration from ischemia.
Publisher Cell Press
ISSN/ISBN 1550-4131 ; 1932-7420
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/79021/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1016/j.cmet.2020.05.004
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32492393
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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