4.7 Article

Spatially resolved measurement of dynamic glucose uptake in live ex vivo tissues

Journal

ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 1141, Issue -, Pages 47-56

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2020.10.027

Keywords

Immunometabolism; Live imaging; Biomarker; FDG

Funding

  1. Hartwell Foundation
  2. University of Virginia 3 Cavaliers Program through the Office of the Vice President for Research
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases through the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01AI131723]
  4. Starter Grant Award from the Society of Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh
  5. Department of Chemistry Summer Scholarship
  6. College Science Scholars Program

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The study developed an optimized method to detect dynamic and spatially resolved glucose uptake in living tissue using a fluorescent glucose analogue and tissue slice culture. This new approach provides a user-friendly platform for quantifying dynamic metabolic activities in complex tissue microenvironments, with potential applications in various research fields.
Highly proliferative cells depend heavily on glycolysis as a source of energy and biological precursor molecules, and glucose uptake is a useful readout of this aspect of metabolic activity. Glucose uptake is commonly quantified by using flow cytometry for cell cultures and positron emission tomography for organs in vivo. However, methods to detect spatiotemporally resolved glucose uptake in intact tissues are far more limited, particularly those that can quantify changes in uptake over time in specific tissue regions and cell types. Using lymph node metabolism as a case study, we developed an optimized method to detect dynamic and spatially resolved glucose uptake in living tissue by combining ex vivo tissue slice culture with a fluorescent glucose analogue. Live slices of murine lymph node were treated with the glucose analogue 2-[N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-dia-xol-4-yl)amino]-2-deoxyglucose (2-NBDG). Incubation parameters were optimized to differentiate glucose uptake in activated versus naive lymphocytes. Regional glucose uptake could be imaged at both the tissue level, by widefield microscopy, and at the cellular level, by confocal microscopy. Furthermore, the glucose assay was readily multiplexed with live immunofluorescence labelling to generate maps of 2-NBDG uptake across tissue regions, revealing highest uptake in T cell-dense regions. The signal was predominantly intracellular and localized to lymphocytes rather than stromal cells. Finally, we demonstrated that the assay was repeatable in the same slices, and imaged the dynamic distribution of glucose uptake in response to ex vivo T cell stimulation for the first time. We anticipate that this method will serve as a broadly applicable, user-friendly platform to quantify dynamic metabolic activities in complex tissue microenvironments. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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