Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-36140-6?error=cookies_not_supported&code=78acb685-fc75-4053-80c8-4f7b769f3886
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 12:46:57+00:00

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Diabetic patients are at a greater risk of heart failure due to diabetic cardiomyopathy and worsened outcome post-myocardial infarction. While the molecular mechanisms remain unclear, fibrosis and chronic inflammation are common characteristics of both conditions. Diabetes mellitus (types I and II) results in excessive hyaluronan (HA) deposition in vivo, and hyperglycemia stimulates HA synthesis for several cell types in vitro. HA-rich extracellular matrix contributes to fibrotic, hyperplastic and inflammatory disease progression. We hypothesized that excessive hyperglycemia-driven HA accumulation may contribute to pathological fibroblast activation and fibrotic remodelling in diabetic patients. Therefore, we analysed the impact of both hyperglycemia and diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance on HA matrix formation and cardiac fibroblast activation. Here we report that cardiac fibroblasts isolated from mice on a diabetogenic diet acquire pro-fibrotic gene expression without a concomitant increase in HA matrix deposition. Additionally, hyperglycemia alone does not stimulate HA synthesis or cardiac fibroblast activation in vitro, suggesting that the direct effect of hyperglycemia on fibroblasts is not the primary driver of fibrotic remodelling in cardiac diabetic maladaptation.
Diabetes mellitus increases the risk of heart failure1 and worsens the outcome after myocardial infarction (MI)2. Although the mechanisms are not entirely clear, increased fibrosis3, the result of activated fibroblasts, appears to be aggravated in diabetic patients. Fibroblast activation refers to fibroblasts’ phenotypic transition from a resting state to an active state of heightened proliferation, migration, contractility and extracellular matrix production4. The most widely used markers for identifying activated fibroblasts are α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) and collagen expression. Originally thought to be responsible only for scar formation, cardiac fibroblast function is now known to be multifaceted. In addition to being the primary matrix-producing cells in the myocardium, fibroblasts secrete pro-inflammatory factors in response to injury5 and mediate cardiomyocyte survival6. Understanding the mechanisms behind fibroblast activation will help us identify factors that promote maladaptive cardiac healing.
Though cardiac fibroblast metabolism is not fully understood, it is generally well established that hyperglycemic conditions induce an activated fibroblast phenotype, in which several signalling mechanisms have been proposed involving: STAT2/37, ERK1/28, Rho/ROCK9, intracellular RAAS10, PAR-411 and NLRP3 inflammasome activation12.
We have previously reported that the extracellular glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA) plays a role in activating cardiac fibroblasts after MI13. HA is also known to facilitate lung14,15 and dermal16 fibroblast activation. HA synthesis is carried out by HA synthases 1, 2 and 3 (HAS1–3), which are integrated into the plasma membrane and elongate a repeating disaccharide chain of (glucuronic acid-β1, 3-N-acetylglucosamine-β1, 4-). To achieve this, HASs draw from a cytosolic pool of nucleotide sugar precursors synthesised by the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway, an alternative glucose metabolism pathway. Thus, HA formation is connected to glucose metabolism and is therefore susceptible to dysregulation in disease states such as diabetes.
In fact, HA accumulation during the progression of types I and II diabetes mellitus has been documented in human aortas17, pancreatic islets, lymphoid tissues18 and circulation19. Animal models of diabetes also show excessive HA deposits, namely in the kidneys of streptozotocin-treated rats20, the skeletal muscles of mice on a high-fat diet21 and the pancreatic islets of the DORmO mouse22. Further, multiple cell types are known to stimulate HA synthesis in response to hyperglycemia. These include, renal proximal tubular epithelial cells23, renal and skin fibroblasts24,25, vascular smooth muscle cells26, endothelial cells27, mesangial cells28 and oesophageal cancer cells29. The mechanism behind this stimulation involves the higher availability of sugar precursors for HA synthesis as well as heightened β-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modifications that mediate the transcriptional and post-translational regulation of HAS2, which in turn facilitates HA production30,31.
Because it accumulates in a number of organs during diabetes and is known to facilitate fibroblast activation, HA may be a contributing factor in the fibrotic remodelling typical of diabetic cardiac pathology and cardiac maladaptation post-MI. Therefore, we investigated the possible link between HA matrix accumulation and cardiac fibroblast activation in response to hyperglycemia in vitro and diet-induced insulin resistance in vivo.
Primary cardiac fibroblasts cultures isolated from 8–10-week-old male C57BL/6 J mice were proven by flow cytometry to be 96% pure (Supplemental Fig. 1). To test the effects of hyperglycemia on HA production and fibroblast activation, cells were incubated in media containing 10% FBS and 5.5 mM (normoglycemia) or 25 mM (hyperglycemia) glucose for up to 72 h (Fig. 1a). HA deposition into the media and cell layer was quantified after 24, 48 and 72 h using an HA-binding protein-based test kit (Fig. 1b). The vast majority of the total measured HA was secreted into the media (95–97%) and a significant increase of HA deposition was detected daily, suggesting a continual deposition with little or no turnover. Surprisingly, there was no significant difference in the amount of HA synthesised between normoglycemic and hyperglycemic cultures at any of the time points analysed. The impacts of osmotic pressure and glutamine concentration also showed no differences (Supplemental Fig. 2). Further, we observed no significant regulation of Has1, 2 or 3 mRNA expression (Fig. 1c). The expression of Acta2 (α-smooth muscle actin, α-SMA) and Col1a1 (collagen type I) mRNAs, markers of cardiac fibroblast activation, were also unchanged (Fig. 1d,e). In fact, both markers displayed a trend towards lower expression in hyperglycemic conditions.
Hyperglycemia does not augment either HA matrix production or cardiac fibroblast activation in vitro. Cultures of primary cardiac fibroblasts were treated with media containing 5.5 or 25 mM glucose in 10% FBS for up to 72 hours. (a) Experimental design schematic. (b) Quantification of HA secretion into the media (n = 7) and deposition into the cell layer (n = 3). (c) Quantification of Has1, 2 and 3 mRNA expression, expressed as fold relative to 24 h 5.5 mM, 24 h (n = 6–9), 48 h (n = 5–8) and 72 h (n = 9–12). (d) Quantification of Acta2 mRNA expression after 72 h, expressed as fold of 5.5 mM (n = 7). (e) Quantification of Col1a1 mRNA expression after 72 h, expressed as fold of 5.5 mM (n = 7). For analysis of mRNA expression, Rn18S was used as an internal control. Data represent mean ± SEM; one-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (b,c) and unpaired t-test (d,e).
It has been previously shown in mesangial cells that excessive HA matrix formation is cell cycle dependent, occuring only when dividing cells are challenged with hyperglycemia20. Therefore, HA synthesis was quantified in actively proliferating cardiac fibroblasts; again, hyperglycemic conditions had no effect on proliferation or the amount of HA synthesised (Supplemental Fig. 2). Separate reports also indicate that chronic exposure to hyperglycemia might be necessary to induce changes in HA abundance26. Accordingly, cardiac fibroblasts were cultured continuously in normoglycemic or hyperglycemic media for three passages, and no significant difference in HA synthesis was observed (Supplemental Fig. 2).
To determine if hyperglycemia affects growth factor-driven HA synthesis and fibroblast activation, cultures were stimulated with TGF-β1, a potent inducer of both phenomena, in the presence of 1% FBS and either 5.5 or 25 mM glucose for 72 h (Fig. 2a). Immunocytochemical stainings were performed to visualise and quantify the HA pericellular matrix as well as α-SMA expression (Fig. 2b). Quantification of pericellular HA (Fig. 2c), as well as secreted HA (Fig. 2d), showed significant stimulation upon TGF-β1 treatment in normoglycemic and hyperglycemic conditions. TGF-β1 stimulation also induced α-SMA expression and stress fibre formation in normoglycemic cultures, though to a lesser extent under hyperglycemic conditions (Fig. 2e). Similarly, Acta2 mRNA expression in hyperglycemic cultures demonstrated a weaker response to TGF-β1 (Fig. 2f). TGF-β1 stimulation resulted in significantly elevated Col1a1 mRNA expression in both glucose concentrations (Fig. 2g). There were no significant differences at baseline (without TGF-β1) in any of the assays performed.
Hyperglycemia does not enhance the HA matrix production or activation of cardiac fibroblasts stimulated with TGF-β1. Cultures of primary cardiac fibroblasts were treated with media containing 5.5 or 25 mM glucose in 1% FBS ± 10 ng/mL TGF-β1 for 72 hours. (a) Experimental design schematic. (b) Representative images of immunocytochemical staining of HA (red) and α-SMA (green) with quantification (c,e) (n = 7). (d) Quantification of HA secretion into the media (n = 8). (f) Quantification of Acta2 mRNA expression, expressed as fold of 5.5 mM without TGF-β1 (n = 4). (g) Quantification of Col1a1 mRNA expression, expressed as fold of 5.5 mM without TGF-β1 (n = 4). For analysis of mRNA expression, Rn18S was used as an internal control. Data represent mean ± SEM; one-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (c,d,e,f,g). *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.005, ***P ≤ 0.0005, ****P < 0.0001.
To test whether hyperglycemic media results in an elevated transport of glucose across the cell membrane of cardiac fibroblasts and whether this is an insulin-sensitive process (as is the case with cardiomyocytes32), we quantified the uptake of a radiolabeled glucose analogue. Cultures were given either 5.5 or 25 mM glucose media supplemented with an equal proportion of radiolabeled 2-deoxyglucose, 0.2 µCi/ml and 0.9 µCi/ml 2-deoxy-D-[1, 2-3H]-glucose, respectively; some cultures were given additional insulin (Fig. 3a). Uptake was quantified at 24, 48 and 72 h. Surprisingly, we observed no difference in the amount of intracellular radioactive 2-deoxyglucose between 5.5 mM or 25 mM treated groups at any time point (Fig. 3b). Furthermore, over 72 h, cardiac fibroblasts transported very little glucose: 30785 CPM/mg protein ± 2252, n = 4 (5.5 mM condition) and 26741 CPM/mg protein ±1197, n = 4 (25 mM condition), which corresponded to only 2.7% and 0.75% of the total extracellular radiolabeled analogue, respectively. Insulin supplementation had no effect on glucose transport at any of the time points analysed. However, acute insulin stimulation did result in Akt phosphorylation and notably elevated the extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) (Supplemental Fig. 3), suggesting that cardiac fibroblasts do respond to insulin. Though, this was not accompanied by any significant increase in glucose uptake. This was further supported by the much greater abundance of Slc2a1 (GLUT1) (98.9% ± 0.62, n = 4) mRNAs than Slc2a4 (GLUT4) (0.997% ± 0.61, n = 4) mRNAs (Supplemental Fig. 3). 5.5 and 25 mM glucose-treated groups supplemented with insulin also demonstrated no alteration in HA production (Fig. 3c).
Hyperglycemia does not augment the glucose uptake of cardiac fibroblasts in vitro. Cultures of primary cardiac fibroblasts were treated with media containing 5.5 or 25 mM glucose supplemented with radiolabeled 2-deoxyglucose in 10% FBS for up to 72 hours ± 100 nM insulin. (a) Experimental design schematic. (b) Time course of radiolabeled glucose uptake (n = 4). (c) Quantification of HA secretion into the media (n = 4). Data represent mean ± SEM; two-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (b) and one-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (c).
To examine whether hyperglycemic medium affects cellular metabolism despite the absence of substantially elevated glucose transport, we assayed typical glucose utilisation pathways (Supplemental Fig. 4). Cultures were acutely exposed to normoglycemic or hyperglycemic media for 1 h, after which the extracellular rate of acidification (ECAR) and oxygen consumption rate (OCR) were quantified in real time to estimate glycolysis and mitochondrial oxidation, respectively. Hyperglycemia resulted in significantly elevated ECAR and moderately reduced OCR, suggesting the acute exposure to hyperglycemia stimulated glycolysis while suppressing mitochondrial respiration. However, extracellular lactate levels were not significantly altered after 72 h, indicating that the increased glycolysis eventually normalises. Additionally, hyperglycemia raised both glycogen content and O-GlcNAcylated protein levels, as measured after 72 h. Taken together, these data indicate that hyperglycemic conditions may alter certain aspects of glucose utilisation without a marked difference in total transport. Inhibiting glycolysis has been previously shown to stimulate HA synthesis, presumably making more sugar precursors available to the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway29. To examine whether blocking either glycolysis or glycogen storage could reroute sugar precursors to HA synthesis in cardiac fibroblasts, cultures were treated with siRNAs to knock down phosphofructokinase (Pfkm) or glycogen synthase (Gys1) expression. We observed no significant differences in HA synthesis between normoglycemic and hyperglycemic cultures in any of the conditions tested.
To decipher the surprising lack of elevated glucose uptake and HA synthesis in cardiac fibroblasts exposed to hyperglycemia, we performed a mitochondrial fuel dependency assay. We used oesophageal cancer cells (KYSE) for comparison, as they are known to have elevated intracellular UDP-glucose and subsequently stimulate HA synthesis in response to hyperglycemia29. Mitochondrial respiration was measured in real time, while specific inhibitors of the major oxidative pathways were administered alone and in combination. These inhibitors were UK5099 to inhibit pyruvate shuttling into the mitochondria (glucose oxidation), Bis-2-(5-phenylacetamido-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl) ethyl sulphide (BPTES) to inhibit glutamate formation (glutamine oxidation) and etomoxir to inhibit long-chain fatty acid shuttling into the mitochondria (fatty acid oxidation). Strikingly, the mitochondrial respiration of cardiac fibroblasts was largely unaffected by any of the inhibitors alone or in combination, and full inhibition was only able to reduce cellular respiration by 2–3% (Fig. 4a); presumably, fibroblasts oxidised ketone bodies during this time33. Out of the three pathways, etomoxir administration to inhibit long chain fatty acid shuttling induced the most significant reduction of OCR, indicating a relatively greater dependence on fatty acid oxidation than glucose or glutamine (Fig. 4b). KYSE cells showed 30% less respiration with full inhibition under the same conditions (Fig. 4c) and were highly dependent on glucose and glutamine oxidation (Fig. 4d). These results suggest that cardiac fibroblasts have a highly flexible metabolism and can function independently of glucose oxidation.
Cardiac fibroblasts exhibit high metabolic flexibility. To block the mitochondrial oxidation of glucose, glutamine and fatty acids, cultures of primary cardiac fibroblasts and oesophageal cancer cells (KYSE) were given the inhibitors UK5099, BPTES and etomoxir, respectively. Using a Seahorse XFe96 Analyzer, the oxygen consumption rate (OCR) was monitored in real time while injections of single pathway inhibitors were administered (Target inhibitor), followed by an injection of the remaining 2 inhibitors (All inhibitors) to determine each pathway’s contribution to the total mitochondrial respiration. (a) OCR time course of cardiac fibroblasts, values displayed relative to pre-injection OCR baseline (n = 4). (b) Relative cardiac fibroblast substrate dependency (n = 4). (c) OCR time course of KYSE cells, values displayed relative to pre-injection OCR baseline (n = 3). (d) Relative KYSE cell substrate dependency (n = 3). Data represent mean ± SEM; one-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (b,d). **P ≤ 0.005, ****P < 0.0001.
To further investigate cardiac fibroblast HA matrix formation and activation, we employed a model of diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance in which 8-week-old male C57BL/6 J mice were given standard chow (chow) or a diabetogenic diet (DD) for 11 weeks34 (Fig. 5a). Mice on a diabetogenic diet exhibited increased body weight gain (Fig. 5b), elevated fasting blood glucose (Fig. 5c) and impaired glucose tolerance (Fig. 5d,e). At 19 weeks of age, the total cardiac HA content was quantified and cardiac fibroblasts were cultured to determine their HA production and activation status in response to TGF-β1 and hyperglycemia (Fig. 6a). Analysing the cardiac HA matrix in vivo by fluorophore-assisted carbohydrate electrophoresis (FACE) revealed no differences between chow- and DD-fed mice (Fig. 6b). Similarly, cardiac fibroblasts isolated from chow-fed mice produced the same amount of HA as DD-fed mice, whether the fibroblasts were cultured in normoglycemic or hyperglycemic media (Fig. 6c). By comparison, cardiac fibroblasts isolated from chow-fed mice and cultured in normoglycemic conditions displayed the strongest stimulation of HA synthesis in response to TGF-β1. Interestingly, fibroblasts isolated from DD-fed mice and cultured in hyperglycemic media had significantly lower HA synthesis at baseline than fibroblasts isolated from DD-fed mice cultured in normoglycemia. Analysing fibroblast activation revealed that cardiac fibroblasts isolated from DD-fed mice had higher Acta2 (Fig. 6d) and Col1a1 (Fig. 6e) baseline expressions and had a diminished response to TGF-β1 when stimulated in hyperglycemic media. This was also observable in normoglycemic conditions but to a lesser extent.
Model of diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance. 8-week-old male C57BL/6 J mice were fed a standard chow (chow) or diabetogenic diet (DD) for 11 weeks. (a) Feeding schematic. (b) Body weight (n = 15). (c) Fasting blood glucose (n = 15). (d) Fixed-dose oral glucose tolerance (n = 11,12) with area under the curve (AUC) quantification. (e) Data represent mean ± SEM; two-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (b) and unpaired t-test (c,e). *P ≤ 0.05, ***P ≤ 0.0005, ****P < 0.0001.
Diabetogenic diet does not result in excessive HA accumulation but does promote cardiac fibroblast activation. 8-week-old male C57BL/6J mice were fed standard chow (chow) or diabetogenic diet (DD) for 11 weeks. Subsequently, cardiac HA content was quantified, and cardiac fibroblasts were isolated and treated with media containing 5.5 or 25 mM glucose in 1% FBS ± 10 ng/mL TGF-β1 for 72 hours. (a) Feeding and experimental schematic. (b) Quantification and representative gel of cardiac HA assessed by FACE (n = 15). (c) Quantification of HA secretion by isolated cardiac fibroblasts (n = 8). (d) Quantification of Acta2 mRNA expression of isolated cardiac fibroblasts, expressed as fold of chow-fed without TGF-β1 (n = 6–8). (e) Quantification of Col1a1 mRNA expression of isolated cardiac fibroblasts, expressed as fold of chow-fed without TGF-β1 (n = 6–8). For analysis of mRNA expression, Rn18S was used as an internal control. Data represent mean ± SEM; unpaired t-test (b) and one-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction (c,d,e). *P ≤ 0.05.
By investigating a possible link between HA synthesis and cardiac fibroblast activation in response to hyperglycemia and in a model of obesity and insulin resistance, we demonstrated that excessive HA matrix formation is not required for cardiac fibroblast activation. These data also demonstrate that hyperglycemia alone is not enough to activate adult murine cardiac fibroblasts. However, using a model of obesity and insulin resistance, in which mice are given a diabetogenic diet for 11 weeks, we observed that cardiac fibroblasts acquire enhanced myofibroblastic/fibrotic gene expression and reduced responsiveness to TGF-β1. Similar results have been recently reported, in which cardiac fibroblasts isolated from db/db mice exhibit elevated collagen synthesis and a weakened TGF-β1 response35,36. Our results support the argument that fibrosis in diabetic cardiomyopathy is not solely mediated by hyperglycemia’s direct effects on cardiac fibroblasts. Many other aspects of diabetic pathology are able to activate cardiac fibroblasts37 including: TNF-α, angiotensin II, TGF-β1, oxidative stress, elevated monocyte infiltration38 and increased macrophage abundance39. Another interpretation might suggest that acute hyperglycemia (72 h) is not enough to generate fibrotic effects, whereas chronic exposure, via diabetogenic diet or otherwise, sensitises resident cardiac fibroblasts to activation.
Numerous investigations (>50 publications to date) into hyperglycemia’s influence on cardiac fibroblast phenotype have generally concluded that hyperglycemia induces cardiac fibroblast activation, i.e. enhanced proliferation, collagen synthesis and α-SMA expression7,10,40,41. Our results do not fully align with these findings, as we have demonstrated that ‘healthy’ cardiac fibroblasts do not transport additional glucose when given an extracellular overabundance and do not experience enhanced proliferation or increased collagen or α-SMA expression. It is worth noting that most of the published literature on this subject uses neonatal rat and neonatal mouse cardiac fibroblasts, whereas we used 8+-week-old mice. In fact, separate work using adult murine cardiac fibroblasts also found that glucose concentration did not affect activation status36. Interestingly, neonatal cardiac fibroblasts, unlike the cells we examined, are insulin sensitive and express GLUT442. Moreover, foetal/neonatal hearts primarily utilise glucose and lactate oxidation, while adults primarily utilise fatty acids43,44,45. Therefore, the metabolic substrate preference between neonatal and adult cardiac fibroblasts is likely very different, and may explain their distinct reactions to hyperglycemia.
Our results also demonstrate that adult cardiac fibroblasts have more abundant Slc2a1 (GLUT1) mRNAs to Slc2a4 (GLUT4) mRNAs, indicating their glucose uptake is mostly insulin-independent; this was confirmed by glucose uptake assay. Since the most abundant glucose transporter in the adult heart is GLUT446, cardiac fibroblasts have inherently different glucose regulation than their neighbouring cells.
Additionally, our data show that murine cardiac fibroblasts can withstand hyperglycemia without generating an excessive HA matrix. This result contrasts many previous studies in other cell types that demonstrate hyperglycemic media increases HA production and results in more abundant Has mRNA transcripts23,24,25,26,27,28,47,48,49,50. However, because hyperglycemia did not alter glucose transport across the cell membrane of the cardiac fibroblasts used here, no additional sugar substrates would be available for hexosamine biosynthesis. Has mRNA expression was also unchanged; therefore, it is not surprising that HA production remains equal to that in normoglycemic controls.
We observed signs of altered glucose utilisation in which hyperglycemia may drive glycolysis, glycogen formation and increased cellular O-GlcNAc modifications. Although they contradict the equal uptake of radiolabeled glucose, these findings may be attributed to either acute effects, which eventually normalise over 72 h, or may represent minimal changes in glucose uptake that were too small to detect by glucose uptake assay. It should be noted that the overall extracellular lactate levels were unchanged at 72 h, and the increase in O-GlcNAc protein modifications was not as pronounced as others reports51. It is likely that a minimal increase in glucose transport occurs acutely but is too small to noticeably affect HA synthesis, as the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway is thought to utilise only 2–5% of the available intracellular glucose52,53.
Much of the research on hyperglycemic stimulation of HA synthesis has used mesangial cells20,28,54. These studies showed that dividing cells pathologically activate HAS enzymes intracellularly in response to hyperglycemic stress, and the resulting HA matrix is extruded after cell division. In our experiments, dividing cardiac fibroblasts did not stimulate HA production in either intra- or extracellular compartments under hyperglycemic stress. However, the reports mentioned above indicate mesangial cells have a doubling time of roughly 24 h20, whereas the cardiac fibroblasts we examined took nearly 65 h to complete one doubling. This phenotypic trait could be responsible for the different responses to hyperglycemia, as cardiac fibroblasts may be too quiescent to experience the same phenomenon in vitro.
We believe the ability of cardiac fibroblasts to resist hyperglycemia is an interesting characteristic that needs further investigation. The experiments presented in Fig. 4 demonstrate that cardiac fibroblasts are highly flexible in utilising metabolic substrates and have a relatively greater dependence on fatty acid oxidation than glucose oxidation, similar to the adult heart as a whole43. Furthermore, cardiac fibroblasts used only a small percentage of their glucose over 72 h, which is in keeping with a previous report of human cardiac myofibroblasts using only 1% of available glucose over 96 h55. High metabolic flexibility and a preference for fatty acids may explain why the cells did not use their extra glucose supply, namely in the presence of FBS, which provides ample fatty acid substrates. Interestingly, KYSE cells, which accumulate HA under hyperglycemia29, were shown to be relatively inflexible and more dependent on glucose oxidation for mitochondrial respiration. These cell types’ two distinct metabolisms could underlie their dissimilar stimulation of HA synthesis in response to hyperglycemia. In other words, dependence on glucose oxidation and/or metabolic inflexibility may be a common characteristic of cells that create excessive HA matrices under pathological conditions.
While HA matrix formation did not correlate with cardiac fibroblast activation in our study, nor did cardiac HA accumulate under diabetic conditions, excessive HA matrix formation and its contribution to fibrotic remodelling in diabetic patients cannot be completely ruled out, especially in the post-ischemic setting. We have previously demonstrated robust HA formation in the acute phase post-MI13, while the uninjured heart has a relatively minimal HA matrix. Further, failing myocardium is known to take on a foetal gene program56,57 and go through metabolic reprogramming58, which includes elevated glucose uptake59. Each of these changes has the potential to modulate HA matrix production in response to hyperglycemia. Therefore, further investigation is needed into how cardiac disease states may affect HA synthesis in diabetic conditions.
All mice used in this study were C57BL/6 J obtained from Janvier Labs. All experimental protocols were approved and performed in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations set forth by the Landesamt für Natur, Umwelt und Verbraucherschutz (LANUV) Nordrhein-Westfalen, Bezirksregierung Düsseldorf, Aktenzeichen: 84-02.04.2015.A322.
8-week-old male mice were fed a standard chow (chow) or diabetogenic diet (DD) (S7200-E010, EF Bio-Serv F1850; 24% sucrose, 35.85% lard, Ssniff) for 11 weeks to induce obesity and insulin resistance. Body weight was measured weekly. Fasting blood glucose and oral glucose tolerance were assayed at 19 weeks of age, after a 6 h fasting period. Glucose tolerance was tested with a fixed dose (orally administrered) of 2 mg glucose/mean kg body weight of chow-fed animals. Blood glucose was measured with the ACCU-CHEK Compact Plus device (Roche).
Primary cardiac fibroblasts were isolated from 8–10-week-old or 19-week-old male mice via retrograde perfusion with collagenase type I (Worthington). The resulting cell suspension was filtered through 100 µm and 40 µm sterile filters, pelleted at 300 × g for 5 min, resuspended and plated in 100 mm dishes. After 4 h, non-adherent cells were removed by aspiration and the adherent cells were given fresh growth media consisting of 5.5 mM glucose DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml streptomycin (all reagents from Gibco Life Technologies). After 48 h, the cell layers were washed with media to remove loosely adherent debris and then given 48 h further incubation in fresh growth media. Fibroblasts were then trypsin passaged and plated for experiments. Before treatment, cells were synchronised for 48 h in 1% FBS. Treatments included media containing 5.5 mM and 25 mM glucose, 100 nM insulin (Sigma-Aldrich) and 10 ng/mL TGF-β1 (Peprotech). Oesophageal cancer cells (KYSE) were grown in RPMI supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml streptomycin as described previously29.
Cardiac fibroblasts were seeded on glass coverslips and fixed using 70% ethanol, 5% acetic acid and 3.7% formaldehyde in PBS. HA affinity histochemistry was done with biotinylated HA-binding protein (Calbiochem) and Streptavidin-Cy3 (Invitrogen). α-SMA was detected with anti-α-smooth muscle actin (ab5694, Abcam) followed by an Alexa Fluor 647 goat anti-rabbit IgG (H + L) secondary antibody (Life Technologies); nuclei were stained with Roti-Mount Fluor-Care DAPI (Carl Roth). 180 images were captured for each culture using a Zeiss AxioObserver.Z1 microscope and stitched together using ZEN 2 software (Carl Zeiss Microscopy). The fluorescent signal was quantified from the resulting mosaic and normalised to the number of nuclei using ImageJ software (NIH).
To quantify HA in cell culture supernatants and cell layers, an HA-binding protein-based test kit (Corgenix Medical) was used. Before analysis, supernatants were spun at 300 × g for 5 min to remove floating debris. Cell layers were washed once with PBS and digested for 2 h at 60 °C with 1 mg/ml proteinase K (Invitrogen) in 100 mM ammonium acetate and 0.01% sodium dodecyl sulphate, followed by incubation at 100 °C to inactivate proteases. Values were normalised to DNA content determined by the Quant-iT PicoGreen dsDNA Assay Kit (Molecular Probes). To quantify HA in cardiac tissue, fluorophore-assisted carbohydrate electrophoresis (FACE) was used, as described previously60. Briefly, hearts were perfused with PBS heparin, harvested into cold PBS and washed twice on ice. The tissue was minced into small pieces, placed on a 100 um filter and washed with 10 mL PBS to remove residual blood. The tissue was then digested in proteinase K at 60 °C for 3 h, and glycosaminoglycans were isolated by ethanol precipitation and digested with Streptomyces hyaluronidase to generate HA tetramers (HA4) and hexamers (HA6). The resulting HA oligosaccharides were incubated with 2-aminoacridone (AMAC, Thermo Fischer Scientific) and separated by gel electrophoresis alongside an HA standard (LifeCore Biomedical) digested in the same fashion. Gel images were captured using a UVP ChemStudio imaging system (Analytik Jena) and quantified using Visionworks software (Analytik Jena). Values were normalized to DNA content as above.
Acta2, forward 5′-CAGGCATGGATGGCATCAATCAC-3′, reverse 5′-ACTCTAGCTGTGAAGTCAGTGTCG-3′; Col1a1, forward 5′-CCCTGGTCCCTCTGGAAATG-3′, reverse 5′-GGACCTTTGCCCCCTTCTTT-3′; Has1, forward 5′-TATGCTACCAAGTATACCTCG-3′, reverse 5′-TCTCGGAAGTAAGATTTGGAC-3; Has2, forward 5′-CAAAAATGGGGTGGAAAGAG-3′, reverse 5′-ACAGATGAGGCAGGGTCAAG-3′; Has3, forward 5′-CTCAGTGGACTACATCCAGG-3′, reverse 5′- GACATCTCCTCCAACACCTC-3′; Slc2a1, forward 5′-GCATCTTCGAGAAGGCAGGT-3′, reverse 5′-GTCCAGCTCGCTCTACAACA-3′; Slc2a4, forward 5′-ATCATCCGGAACCTGGAGG-3′, reverse 5′-CGGTCAGGCGCTTTAGACTC-3′; Pfkm, forward 5′-GGGACACCATCAGCCTTTGA-3′, reverse 5′-TCCCCTCCAAAAGTGCCATC-3′; Gys1, forward 5′-CGAATCCCTTTTAGTGGGGAG-3′, reverse 5′-TGAGGAGTCGTCCAGCATGT-3′; Rn18s, forward 5′-GCAATTATTCCCCATGAACG-3′, reverse 5′-GGCCTCACTAAACCATCCAA-3′.
Cells were seeded in 12-well dishes and synchronised for 48 h in 1% FBS. Cells were then given low 5.5 mM or 25 mM glucose DMEM 10% FBS supplemented with 0.2 µCi/ml and 0.9 µCi/ml 2-deoxy-D-[1,2-3H]-glucose, respectively (PerkinElmer). At the indicated time points cell culture supernatants were collected, and cell layers were washed once with PBS and lysed with 0.1 N NaOH. Radioactivity was measured using a Beckmann LS 6500 scintillation counter, quench corrected and normalised to protein content, as determined by Bradford assay.
For real-time determination of the oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and extracellular acidification rate (ECAR), a Seahorse XFe96 Analyzer was used (Agilent Technologies). 24 h in advance, cells were seeded in 5.5 mM glucose DMEM with 10% FBS at 20,000 cells per well in a XF96 Seahorse plate. 1 h before measurements, cells were given XF base media supplemented with 2 mM glutamine, 1 mM pyruvate, 10% FBS and either 5.5 mM glucose or 25 mM glucose. OCR and ECAR measurements were collected for 90 min to achieve a baseline, after which insulin was injected to a final concentration of 100 nM and measurements were taken for another 90 min. For mitochondrial substrate dependency, a Seahorse XF Mito Fuel Flex Test Kit was used to manufacturer’s specifications. Experiments were conducted using media without serum, which was shown to interfere with inhibitor efficacy in a pilot run. Pathway dependency was calculated with Wave Software (Agilent Technologies), where Dependency % = ((baseline OCR − target inhibitor OCR)/(baseline OCR − all inhibitors OCR)) × 100.
Statistical analyses were performed using the GraphPad Prism Software Version 7.0 (GraphPad Software). All data are presented as a mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM), and outliers identified by Grubb’s test (α = 0.05) were excluded. For cardiac fibroblast cultures and animals used for experimental obesity and insulin resistance, each “n” represents a distinct biological replicate. For KYSE cell culture, each “n” represents a distinct passage. Unpaired t-test was used to compare groups of two; otherwise, ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple-comparison correction was used. P values of < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.005, ***P ≤ 0.0005, ****P ≤ 0.0001.
The datasets generated in the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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We thank Irmhild Rüter for her technical assistance with the hyaluronan and glucose uptake assays as well as Ronald J. Midura and Valbona Cali for their technical support and guidance regarding FACE analysis. This study was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, SFB1116 (J.W.F.), and by the Forschungskommission, Medizinische Fakultät, Universität Düsseldorf (D.J.G.).
D.J.G. designed and carried out experiments and prepared the manuscript. A.P. assisted with FACE analysis and performed flow cytometry. C.R. performed KYSE. cell culture and seahorse assay. S.T. assisted with experimental planning and data analysis. M.G. assisted with experimental planning, provided technical guidance on diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance and assisted with manuscript preparation. J.W.F. designed experiments and assisted with data interpretation as well as manuscript preparation.
Correspondence to Jens W. Fischer.

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