Chapter 15 Phosphatidylserine exposure and phagocytosis of apoptotic cells

Author(s):  
Patrick Williamson ◽  
Stefan van den Eijnde ◽  
Robert A. Schlegel
Science ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 341 (6144) ◽  
pp. 403-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Suzuki ◽  
D. P. Denning ◽  
E. Imanishi ◽  
H. R. Horvitz ◽  
S. Nagata

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 663-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone M. Schoenwaelder ◽  
Yuping Yuan ◽  
Emma C. Josefsson ◽  
Michael J. White ◽  
Yu Yao ◽  
...  

Abstract Procoagulant platelets exhibit hallmark features of apoptotic cells, including membrane blebbing, microvesiculation, and phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure. Although platelets possess many well-known apoptotic regulators, their role in regulating the procoagulant function of platelets is unclear. To clarify this, we investigated the consequence of removing the essential mediators of apoptosis, Bak and Bax, or directly inducing apoptosis with the BH3 mimetic compound ABT-737. Treatment of platelets with ABT-737 triggered PS exposure and a marked increase in thrombin generation in vitro. This increase in procoagulant function was Bak/Bax- and caspase-dependent, but it was unaffected by inhibitors of platelet activation or by chelating extracellular calcium. In contrast, agonist-induced platelet procoagulant function was unchanged in Bak−/−Bax−/− or caspase inhibitor–treated platelets, but it was completely eliminated by extracellular calcium chelators or inhibitors of platelet activation. These studies show the existence of 2 distinct pathways regulating the procoagulant function of platelets.


2003 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 964-972 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher D. Huston ◽  
Douglas R. Boettner ◽  
Vanessa Miller-Sims ◽  
William A. Petri,

ABSTRACT The ability of Entamoeba histolytica to kill and phagocytose host cells correlates with parasite virulence. This study addressed the role of apoptotic cell killing and host cell phosphatidylserine exposure in the subsequent phagocytosis of Jurkat T cells by E. histolytica. Ingested host cells were apoptotic, as evidenced by the activation of caspase 3 in 88% ± 3% (mean and standard deviation [SD] of the mean) of Jurkat cells engulfed by E. histolytica; ingested cells without detectable active caspase 3 were already disrupted and partially digested. That apoptotic cell killing preceded phagocytosis was supported by the demonstration that a higher percentage of amebae ingested apoptotic cells than ingested healthy cells (62% ± 7% versus 30% ± 9%, respectively [mean and SD]) (P = 0.008). E. histolytica also ingested apoptotic Jurkat cells more rapidly than necrotic control cells (8.5% ± 0.4% versus 3.5% ± 0.7%, respectively [mean and SD]) (P < 0.001). The inhibition of amebic cytotoxicity with d-galactose (which blocks the amebic Gal/GalNAc lectin) blocked the phagocytosis of healthy cells by greater than 80%, providing further evidence that apoptosis preceded engulfment. In contrast, d-galactose blocked the phagocytosis of already apoptotic cells by only 40%, implicating an additional host ligand (besides d-galactose) in amebic engulfment of apoptotic cells. The most characteristic surface change on apoptotic cells is phosphatidylserine exposure. Consistent with a role for host cell phosphatidylserine exposure in amebic ingestion of killed cells, Jurkat cell phosphatidylserine was exposed during incubation with E. histolytica (27% ± 1% [mean and SD] specific increase at 30 min) (the P value versus the control was 0.0003). Approximately 50% more amebae ingested viable Jurkat cells expressing phosphatidylserine on the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane than ingested control cells (30.3% ± 2.2% versus 19.8% ± 1.9%, respectively [mean and SD]) (P = 0.003). By analogy with phagocytic clearance during apoptosis in metazoans, amebic apoptotic host cell killing followed by phagocytosis may limit inflammation and enable amebae to evade the host immune response.


Author(s):  
Amelia E. Hochreiter-Hufford ◽  
Sanja Arandjelovic ◽  
Kodi S. Ravichandran

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. SCI-31-SCI-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shigekazu Nagata

Abstract One of the hallmarks of apoptosis is the caspase-dependent exposure of phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) on cell surface, which is recognized by macrophages for engulfment of dead cells (1). How PtdSer is exposed to the cell surface had been elusive for a long time. We recently identified two membrane proteins (TMEM16F and Xkr8) that are involved in scrambling of phospholipids in plasma membrane (2, 3). TMEM16F carries 8 transmembrane regions, and requires Ca2+ to mediate phospholipid scrambling. It plays a role in the PtdSer-exposure in activated platelets for blood clotting, and patients of Scott Syndrome who suffer bleeding disorder carry a mutation in TMEM16F gene. Xkr8 is a protein carrying 6 transmembrane regions. Caspase 3 and 7 cleave off the C-terminal tail of Xkr8, and the cleaved Xkr8 promotes the PtdSer-exposure. In addition to the activation of scramblase, the flippase that translocates PtdSer from outer to inner leaflets was thought to be inactivated during apoptosis. In fact, we recently found that a pair of molecules, ATP11C of a P4-type ATPase and its chaperon CDC50A work as a flippase at plasma membrane (4, 5). ATP11C carries three caspase recognition sites in the middle of the molecule, and is cleaved during apoptosis. When ATP11C gene is mutated, the cells lose most of the flippase activity, but the asymmetrical distribution of PtdSer was still maintained at plasma membrane. Whereas, the cells lacking CDC50A completely lost the flippase activity and constitutively exposed PtdSer. The PtdSer-exposing living CDC50A-null cells were engulfed by thioglycollate-elicited macrophages, indicating that PtdSer exposed on the cell surface is necessary and sufficient to be recognized by macrophages for engulfment. Several molecules such as MFG-E8, Tim-4, Gas6, and Protein S specifically bind to PtdSer with high affinity, and promote the engulfment of PtdSer-exposing cells. However, how they work for the engulfment of apoptotic cells in certain macrophages has not been clear. We recently found that that resident peritoneal macrophages require both Tim4 and Protein S for engulfment, and Tim4, PtdSer-receptor, was involved in tethering of apoptotic cells, while Protein S promoted the engulfment of apoptotic cells by binding to MerTK, a tyrosine kinase receptor (6, 7). Here, I discuss how PdtSer is exposed during apoptotic cell death, and how dead cells are engulfed by macrophages. 1. Nagata S, Hanayama R, Kawane K. Autoimmunity and the clearance of dead cells. Cell. 2010;140:619-630. 2. Suzuki J, Umeda M, Sims PJ, Nagata S. Calcium-dependent phospholipid scrambling by TMEM16F. Nature. 2010;468:834-838. 3. Suzuki J, Denning DP, Imanishi E, Horvitz HR, Nagata S. Xk-related protein 8 and CED-8 promote phosphatidylserine exposure in apoptotic cells. Science. 2013;341:403-406. 4. Segawa K, Suzuki J, Nagata S. Flippases and scramblases in the plasma membrane. Cell Cycle. 2014;13:2990-2991. 5. Segawa K, Kurata S, Yanagihashi Y, Brummelkamp T, Matsuda F, Nagata S. Caspase-mediated cleavage of phospholipid flippase for apoptotic phosphatidylserine exposure. Science. 2014;344:1164-1168. 6. Nishi C, Toda S, Segawa K, Nagata S. Tim4- and MerTK-mediated engulfment of apoptotic cells by mouse resident peritoneal macrophages. Mol Cell Biol. 2014;34:1512-1520. 7. Toda S, Segawa K, Nagata S. MerTK-mediated engulfment of pyrenocytes by central macrophages in erythroblastic islands. Blood. 2014;123:3963-3971. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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