Creatine kinase regulates energy metabolism and growth of trophoblasts

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Creatine kinase regulates energy metabolism and growth of trophoblasts

Authors

Sah, N.; Zheng, C.; Shaik, W.; Stein, F. H.; Rajupalem, R.; Meads, M.; Pizzo, D.; Soncin, F.

Abstract

Study question: Does the human placenta utilize the creatine phosphagen system for energy homeostasis during development? Summary answer: Components of the creatine (Cr)-creatine kinase (CK)-phosphocreatine (PCr) system are dynamically expressed by the trophoblast and mesenchymal compartments throughout gestation wherein creatine kinase is required for cellular ATP metabolism, cell cycle, and proliferation of trophoblast cells. What is known already: The Cr-CK-PCr system maintains ATP homeostasis in tissues with high energy demand and is required for proliferation, migration, and invasion of tumor cells. The term human placenta can synthesize and transport creatine locally. Early placental development involves trophoblast proliferation, an event requiring ATP, but the role of the creatine phosphagen system during early placental development remains unknown. Study design, size, duration: We performed immunohistochemistry (IHC) and immunofluorescence (IF) for different components (biosynthesis, transport, utilization) of the Cr-Ck-PCr system in human placentae (n=3/group) across gestation including first trimester, second trimester, and term. Using primary human trophoblast stem cells (hTSCs) and trophoblast organoids (TO), we determined the role of the creatine phosphagen system in trophoblast growth by functional inhibition of creatine kinase. Participants/materials, setting, methods: IHC/IF were performed in human placentae across gestation for proteins involved in biosynthesis (AGAT and GAMT), transport (SLC6A8, SLC22A15, and SLC6A13) and utilization (CKB and CKMT1) of creatine to determine the presence of the creatine phosphagen system locally in the placenta. For delineating the functional importance of this system in placental development, cyclocreatine (cCr), a creatine analogue, was used for functional inhibition of CK. Primary hTSCs were culture in medium containing 0 (control), 1, 10, 20 mM cCr for 48 hours followed by analysis of cell growth (cell count), cell cycle (EdU incorporation assay), apoptosis (Annexin V/PI flow cytometry), energy metabolism (Sea horse mito-stress and glycolytic stress tests), and gene expression (qPCR). Primary TO were also treated with 20mM cCr for 6 days in vitro to determine the role of Cr-CK-PCr system in placental development. Main results and the role of chance: AGAT localized to the fetal villous mesenchyme, while GAMT was broadly expressed in the trophoblast and fetal mesenchyme compartments across gestation. CKB localized primarily to fetal mesenchyme with strongest expression at term. CKMT1 was broadly expressed in all trophoblast subtypes. SLC6A8 was abundant in early syncytiotrophoblast but absent at term, where its expression shifted to fetal blood vessels. SLC22A15 was expressed in the endothelial cells of fetal capillaries across gestation. In primary hTSCs, cyclocreatine (20mM) treatment reduced proliferation (P<0.001), decreased expression of trophoblast epithelial marker EGFR (P<0.05), induced G0/G1 and G2/M arrests (P<0.0001), enhanced early and late apoptosis (P<0.0001), and downregulated GPX8 expression (P<0.05). Seahorse analysis revealed marked reductions (P<0.01) in mitochondrial (basal, maximal, and ATP-linked) and glycolytic (rate, capacity, and reserve) function compared to controls. In primary human TO, cyclocreatine treatment reduced the growth of organoids (P<0.05) as well the expression of EGFR (P<0.05). Large scale data: N/A Limitations, reasons for caution: Further experiments assessing apoptosis, cellular stress and redox imbalance may provide more mechanistic role of the creatine phosphagen system in trophoblast metabolism and function. Since the functional role of the Cr-CK-PCr system was investigated in vitro, findings of this study should be taken with caution for implications of in vivo placental development. Nevertheless, reproducible results of reduced growth of trophoblast cells using both 2D and 3D cultures is highly suggestive of the importance of the creatine phosphagen system in early placental development. Wider implications of the findings: This study provides foundational knowledge that the placenta contains the creatine phosphagen system, known for ATP homeostasis, and that this system ensures proper cell division, survival and placental development. Dysregulation of components of Cr-CK-PCr system in placenta has been observed in pregnancy disorders such as preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction warranting continued investigation into mechanisms and potential remediation using creatine supplementation. Stem cells share similar metabolic features so findings of this study can be implicated in other stem cells models as well. Study funding/competing interest(s): This work was supported by CIRM EDUC4-12804 Interdisciplinary Stem Cell Training Grant and a Lalor Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship awarded to NS, and by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (DISC0-13757) and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R01-HD096260) award to FS. The authors have no competing interest to declare.

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