PLoS Biology (Mar 2008)

Creatine kinase-mediated ATP supply fuels actin-based events in phagocytosis.

  • Jan W P Kuiper,
  • Helma Pluk,
  • Frank Oerlemans,
  • Frank N van Leeuwen,
  • Frank de Lange,
  • Jack Fransen,
  • Bé Wieringa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0060051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
p. e51

Abstract

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Phagocytosis requires locally coordinated cytoskeletal rearrangements driven by actin polymerization and myosin motor activity. How this actomyosin dynamics is dependent upon systems that provide access to ATP at phagosome microdomains has not been determined. We analyzed the role of brain-type creatine kinase (CK-B), an enzyme involved in high-energy phosphoryl transfer. We demonstrate that endogenous CK-B in macrophages is mobilized from the cytosolic pool and coaccumulates with F-actin at nascent phagosomes. Live cell imaging with XFP-tagged CK-B and beta-actin revealed the transient and specific nature of this partitioning process. Overexpression of a catalytic dead CK-B or CK-specific cyclocreatine inhibition caused a significant reduction of actin accumulation in the phagocytic cup area, and reduced complement receptor-mediated, but not Fc-gammaR-mediated, ingestion capacity of macrophages. Finally, we found that inhibition of CK-B affected phagocytosis already at the stage of particle adhesion, most likely via effects on actin polymerization behavior. We propose that CK-B activity in macrophages contributes to complement-induced F-actin assembly events in early phagocytosis by providing local ATP supply.