Macrophage uptake and accumulation of folates are polarization-dependent in vitro and in vivo and are regulated by activin A.

Journal: Journal Of Leukocyte Biology
Published:
Abstract

Vitamin B9, commonly known as folate, is an essential cofactor for one-carbon metabolism that enters cells through three major specialized transporter molecules (RFC, FR, and PCFT), which differ in expression pattern, affinity for substrate, and ligand-binding pH dependency. We now report that the expression of the folate transporters differs between macrophage subtypes and explains the higher accumulation of 5-MTHF-the major folate form found in serum-in M2 macrophages in vitro and in vivo. M1 macrophages display a higher expression of RFC, whereas FRβ and PCFT are preferentially expressed by anti-inflammatory and homeostatic M2 macrophages. These differences are also seen in macrophages from normal tissues involved in folate transit (placenta, liver, colon) and inflamed tissues (ulcerative colitis, RA), as M2-like macrophages from normal tissues express FRβ and PCFT, whereas TNF-α-expressing M1 macrophages from inflamed tissues are RFC+. Besides, we provide evidences that activin A is a critical factor controlling the set of folate transporters in macrophages, as it down-regulates FRβ, up-regulates RFC expression, and modulates 5-MTHF uptake. All of these experiments support the notion that folate handling is dependent on the stage of macrophage polarization.

Authors
Rafael Samaniego, Blanca Palacios, Ángeles Domiguez Soto, Carlos Vidal, Azucena Salas, Takami Matsuyama, Carmen Sánchez Torres, Inmaculada De La Torre, Maria Miranda Carús, Paloma Sánchez Mateos, Amaya Puig Kröger