Abstract Macrophages hold vital roles in immune defense, wound healing, and tissue homeostasis, and have the exquisite ability to sense and respond to dynamically changing cues in their microenvironment. Much of our understanding of their behavior has been derived from studies performed using in vitro culture systems, in which the cell environment can be precisely controlled. Recent advances in miniaturized culture platforms also offer the ability to recapitulate some features of the in vivo environment and analyze cellular responses at the single‐cell level. Since macrophages are sensitive to their surrounding environments, the specific conditions in both macro‐ and micro‐scale cultures likely contribute to observed responses. In this study, we investigate how the presence of neighboring cells influence macrophage activation following proinflammatory stimulation in both bulk and micro‐scale culture. We found that in bulk cultures, higher seeding density negatively regulated the average TNF‐α secretion from individual macrophages in response to inflammatory agonists, and this effect was partially caused by the reduced cell‐to‐media volume ratio. In contrast, studies conducted using microwells to isolate single cells and groups of cells revealed that increasing numbers of cells positively influences their inflammatory activation, suggesting that the absolute cell numbers in the system may be important. In addition, a single inflammatory cell enhanced the inflammatory state of a small group of cells. Overall, this work helps to better understand how variations of macroscopic and microscopic culture environments influence studies in macrophage biology and provides insight into how the presence of neighboring cells and the soluble environment influences macrophage activation.
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Evidence of collective influence in innate sensing using fluidic force microscopy
The innate immune system initiates early response to infection by sensing molecular patterns of infection through pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs). Previous work on PRR stimulation of macrophages revealed significant heterogeneity in single cell responses, suggesting the importance of individual macrophage stimulation. Current methods either isolate individual macrophages or stimulate a whole culture and measure individual readouts. We probed single cell NF-κB responses to localized stimuli within a naïve culture with Fluidic Force Microscopy (FluidFM). Individual cells stimulated in naïve culture were more sensitive compared to individual cells in uniformly stimulated cultures. In cluster stimulation, NF-κB activation decreased with increased cell density or decreased stimulation time. Our results support the growing body of evidence for cell-to-cell communication in macrophage activation, and limit potential mechanisms. Such a mechanism might be manipulated to tune macrophage sensitivity, and the density-dependent modulation of sensitivity to PRR signals could have relevance to biological situations where macrophage density increases.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2121044
- PAR ID:
- 10508383
- Publisher / Repository:
- Frontiers in Immunology
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Frontiers in Immunology
- Volume:
- 15
- ISSN:
- 1664-3224
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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