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In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Protocol
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Disclosures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

The present protocol describes an assay to assess the capacity for fatty acid oxidation in cultures of primary bone cells or relevant cell lines.

Abstract

Bone formation by differentiating osteoblasts is expected to require significant energetic input as these specialized cells must synthesize large extracellular matrix proteins that compose bone tissue and then concentrate the ions necessary for its mineralization. Data on the metabolic requirements of bone formation are emerging rapidly. While much remains to be learned, it is expected that derangements in the intermediary metabolism contribute to skeletal disease. Here, a protocol is outlined to assess the capacity of osteoblastic cells to oxidize 14C-labeled fatty acids to 14CO2 and acid-soluble metabolites. Fatty acids represent a rich-energy reserve that can be taken up from the circulation after feeding or after their liberation from adipose tissue stores. The assay, performed in T-25 tissue culture flasks, is helpful for the study of gene gain or loss-of-function on fatty acid utilization and the effect of anabolic signals in the form of growth factors or morphogens necessary for the maintenance of bone mass. Details on the ability to adapt the protocol to assess the oxidation of glucose or amino acids like glutamine are also provided.

Introduction

The osteoblast, derived from progenitor cells present in the bone marrow and the periosteum, is responsible for synthesizing and secretion of the mineralized, collagen-rich matrix that composes bone tissue. To fulfill this energetically expensive endeavor and contribute to the lifelong maintenance of skeletal integrity, these specialized cells maintain an abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum essential for synthesizing extracellular matrix proteins1,2 and numerous high membrane-potential mitochondria to harvest the requisite chemical energy from fuel substrates3,4. The importance of this latter function is exemplified by the cessation of bone growth and the development of osteopenia5,6 associated with energy deficits as in caloric restriction. The identity of the osteoblast's preferred fuel source and the data on the metabolic requirements of the osteoblast during differentiation or in response to anabolic signaling are emerging7,8.

Long-chain fatty acids represent a rich supply of chemical energy present in serum and released from adipose tissue in response to reduced caloric intake or heightened energy expenditure. After traversing the cell membrane and ligating to Coenzyme A to increase solubility, fatty acyl-CoAs are shuttled into the mitochondrial matrix by the dual carnitine palmitoyltransferase enzymes on the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes and carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase7. Within the mitochondrial matrix, the Ξ²-oxidation machinery chain shortens acyl-CoA in a 4-step process that generates acetyl-CoA that enters the TCA cycle (tricarboxylic acid cycle) and reducingΒ equivalents. Catabolism of palmitate (C16), the most common fatty acids in animals, via this pathway yields ~131 ATP, substantially more than the ~38 ATP generated by glucose oxidation7.

Tracing studies using radiolabeled lipids indicated that bone takes up a significant fraction of circulating lipids9,10, while genetic ablation of enzymes critical to lipid catabolism leads to a reduction in osteoblast activity and bone loss9,11. The protocol presented here uses a 14C-labeled fatty acid to evaluate the capacity of cultured osteoblasts to fully metabolize fatty acids to CO2 or acid-soluble metabolites, which represent intermediate steps in the oxidation process. While the use of radioactivity is required, the method is straightforward, requires limited investment, and is adaptable for the benefit of other radiolabeled metabolites and cell types.

Protocol

This protocol uses the conversion of [1-14C]-oleic acidΒ to 14CO2 as an indicator of fatty acid oxidation capacity. The local Radiation Safety office approved the protocol for using radioactive materials before initiating the experiments. All radiation procedures were performed behind a plexiglass shield using appropriate personal protective equipment. Local Animal Care and Use Committee approved the protocol prior to using primary cells.

1. Fatty acid oxidation in cultured osteoblasts

  1. Sub-culture the primary calvarial osteoblasts12 or an osteoblastic cell line like Mc3t3-E1, and plate in T-25 flasks (5 x 105 cells/flask) in Ξ±-MEM containing 10% fetal bovine serum, 100 U/mL of penicillin, and 0.1 ΞΌg/mL of streptomycin.
    1. Seed 3-4 flasks for each treatment group (i.e., control and gene knockout or vehicle and pharmacological treatment) for use in the experiment. Seed additional 1-2 flasks for each treatment group to normalize to cell number or protein concentrations. Incubate the culture flasks in a humidified cell culture incubator at 37 Β°C with 5% CO2.
  2. Culture the cells for 2-3 days until the flasks become confluent. Induce the confluent cultures to differentiate by adding 50 Β΅g/mL of Ascorbic acid and 10 mM of Ξ²-glycerol phosphate (see Table of Materials) to the culture media and continue culture for up to 14 additional days.
    NOTE: Serum starvation (adding 0.5%-1% FBS) overnight is necessary if growth factor treatments are planned. Lowering the percentage of FBS limits the amount of non-radiolabeled lipids in the culture and allows the maximal effect of exogenous growth factors. If the effects of hormones are to be tested, charcoal-stripped FBS is used.
  3. Prepare the filter paper, 15 mm x 30 mm rubber sleeve stoppers, and polypropylene center wells (see Table of Materials) the day before the experiment.
    1. Fold a 1 cm x 10 cm strip of filter paper in the shape of a fan and place it in the bucket of the polypropylene center well. Press the arm of the polypropylene center well through the center of the rubber sleeve stopper and lower the polypropylene center well into the T-25 flask. Then seal the flask with the sleeve stopper (Figure 1).
      NOTE: It may be necessary to adjust the placement of the polypropylene center well to ensure it does not come in contact with the culture medium. During the experiment, the polypropylene center well prevents the filter paper from touching the labeling medium and allows for the collection of 14CO2.
  4. On the day of the experiment, conjugate [1-14C]-oleic acid to bovine serum albumin (BSA) by mixing 20% bovine serum albumin in phosphate-buffered saline (5 ΞΌL per flask) with 0.1 ΞΌCi/mL of [1-14C]-oleic acid (0.6 ΞΌL/flask) in a 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tube.
    1. Then place the tube in a 50 mL conical tube and incubate at 37 Β°C for 30 min with gentle shaking. Prepare 1-2 extra flasks for oleic Acid-BSA conjugates to account for pipetting error.
  5. Remove the culture medium from the tissue culture flask and replace it with 1.5 mL of fresh serum starvation media (step 1.2).
  6. For each flask, combine 5.6 ΞΌL of oleic Acid-BSA solution (step 1.4) with 2 ΞΌL of 100 mM carnitine solution and 1 mL of culture media to produce a labeling solution. Add the labeling solution to the culture flasks. Keep the excess solution to read the total counts of activity added to the assay.
    NOTE: The labeling solution is not added to the extra flasks intended to quantify cellular number or protein concentration.
  7. Lower the polypropylene center wells containing the filter paper in the flask and then cap it with the rubber stopper.
    NOTE: It is critical that the polypropylene center well must not contact the culture medium. This will lead to cross-contamination of the filter paper with radiolabeled fatty acid instead of CO2.
  8. Incubate the cell cultures for 3 h at 37 Β°C with 5% CO2.
  9. To collect 14CO2, inject 150 ΞΌL of 1 N NaOH into the polypropylene center well to wet the filter paper and 200 ΞΌL of 1 M perchloric acid into the culture medium. Inject the NaOH and perchloric acid by pushing a needle through the rubber stopper.
    NOTE: The rubber stopper should not be removed from the flask. This may cause 14CO2 to escape. For the ease of the injection, keep the flask in the upright position and then return to the culture position after the injections are complete.
  10. Incubate the flasks at 55 Β°C for 1 h.
  11. Open the flasks after cooling them in the cell culture hood. Remove the filter papers from the polypropylene center wells with tweezers and place them in 3-4 mL of scintillation liquid (see Table of Materials) in a scintillation vial.
    ​NOTE: 100 ΞΌL of excess labeling solution is added to 3-4 mL of the scintillation liquid to measure total counts of activity. 100 ΞΌL of basal culture media (without [1-14C]-oleic acid) is added to 3-4 mL of scintillation liquid to measure background activity.
  12. After incubating at room temperature for 1 h or overnight, measure the radioactivity in counts per minute (cpm) using a scintillation counter (see Table of Materials).
  13. To normalize the cpm results, isolate the protein extracts from the unlabeled T-25 flasks for each culture condition. Wash with 5 mL phosphate-buffered saline, add 1 mL RIPA cell lysis buffer to each flask, and scrape the cell surface with a cell scraper.
    1. Transfer the RIPA buffer to a microcentrifuge tube with a pipette and centrifuge at 19,000 x g for 20 min at 4 Β°C. Transfer the supernatant with a pipette to a fresh microcentrifuge tube and determine the protein concentration according to BCA assay protocol (see Table of Materials).
    2. Divide the raw cpm reads from the scintillation counter by the protein concentration to obtain the normalized cpm of 14CO2 produced (Table 1).
  14. Follow local requirements to dispose of the scintillation vials, cell culture materials, medium, syringes, etc. Decontaminate the work surfaces and perform radioactivity wipe tests following local requirements.

2. Acid-soluble metabolite collection

NOTE: The 3 h incubation period used in step 1.8 above may not be sufficient time to oxidize all the [1-14C] fully-oleic acid taken up by cells to CO2. Flux in the fatty acid oxidation pathway can also be assessed by measuring radioactivity in the acid-soluble fraction.

  1. Collect 1 mL of the acidified media from each treated T-25 flask and transfer it to a 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tube.
  2. Add 60 ΞΌL of 20% BSA and 100 ΞΌL of 16 M perchloric acid.
  3. Vortex and incubate overnight at 4 Β°C.
  4. Next, vortex and centrifuge at 20,000 x g for 30 min at 4 Β°C.
  5. Add 200 ΞΌL of the supernatant to the scintillation liquid and measure activity (step 1.12).
  6. Normalize the reads to protein concentration or DNA measurements (step 1.13.1).

3. Measurement of glucose oxidation or amino acid oxidation

  1. Replace 14C-labeled oleic acid with 14C-labeled glucose or 14C-labeled amino acids to measure oxidation of these fuel molecules.
  2. Prepare osteoblast cultures according to steps 1.1-1.2.
  3. To initiate the experiment, remove the culture medium from the tissue culture flask and replace it with 1.5 mL of fresh serum starvation media.
  4. Prepare a labeling solution of 0.6 ΞΌCi of 14C-labeled glucose or 14C-labeled amino acids in 1 mL of starvation media and add to flasks.
  5. Perform steps 1.6-1.13.

Results

Enzymatic activity of both carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1 (Cpt1) and carnitine palmitoyltransferase-2 (Cpt2) are required for mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation. Cpt1 is the rate-limiting enzyme in the metabolic pathway, but three isoforms (Cpt-1a, Cpt-1b, and Cpt-1c) are encoded in mammalian genomes, and the genetic disruption of one isoform can lead to compensation upregulation of another isoform13. By contrast, Cpt2 is encoded by a single gene. In the experiment illustrated in

Discussion

The procedure described above allows for the direct assessment of fatty acid oxidation as the measured outputs are 14CO2 collected on the NaOH soaked filter paper and acid-soluble metabolites collected after the acidification of the culture with perchloric acid. Commercially available assay kits that use fluorescently labeled lipid molecules or lipid analogs can measure lipid uptake, but they do not determine catabolism for energy generation. Other measures of catabolism, such as 13C-meta...

Disclosures

The authors declare no competing interests.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by a Merit Review Award from the Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Service of the Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development (BX003724) and a grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (DK099134).

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
[1-14C]-Oleic acidPerkin ElmerNEC317050UC
15 x 30 mm rubber sleeve stoppersVWR89097-542
1 mL syringeBD precision309628
25 G needle (25 G x 1 1/2 in)BD precision305127
Ascorbic AcidSigma AldrichA4403
BCA Protein Assay KitThermo Fisher23225Other kits are also suitable
Beckman Scintillation Counter, or equivalentBeckman CoulterLS6000SC
Beta-glycerol phosphateSigma AldrichG6626
Bovine Serum AlbuminSigma Aldrich126609
CarnitineSigma AldrichC0283
Cellular lysis bufferThe protocol is amenable to typical lysis buffers (i.e. RIPA)
Dissecting forcepsAvailable from multiple sources
DNA quantification KitAvailable from multiple sources
Dulbecco’s Phosphate-Buffered SalineCorning20-030-CV
Fetal Bovine SerumAvailable from multiple sources
Microcentrifuge tubes, 1.5 mLAvailable from multiple sources
Minimum Essensial Medium, Alpha modificationCorning10-022-CV
Penicillin-StreptomycinGibco15140122
Perchloric AcidSigma Aldrich50439
Polypropylene center wellsVWR72760-048
Sodium hydroxideSigma AldrichS5881
T-25 canted neck tissue culture flaskCorning430639
Tissue Culture Incubator
Trypsin (0.25%)-EDTAGibco25200056
Ultima Gold (Scintillation solution)PerkinElmer6013329
Whatman Chromatography paperSigma AldrichWHA3030917

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Fatty Acid OxidationBone CellsOsteoblastsEnergy Metabolism14C labeled Fatty Acids14CO2Acid soluble MetabolitesGlucose OxidationGlutamine OxidationSkeletal DiseaseBone FormationGene FunctionGrowth FactorsMorphogensBone Mass

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