Role of Arginine and its Metabolism in TGF-β-Induced Activation of Lung Fibroblasts
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Arginine is a conditionally essential amino acid with known roles in protein production, nitric oxide synthesis, biosynthesis of proline and polyamines, and regulation of intracellular signaling pathways. Arginine biosynthesis and catabolism have been linked to TGF-β-induced activation of fibroblasts in the context of pulmonary fibrosis; however, a thorough study on the metabolic and signaling roles of arginine in the process of fibroblast activation has not been conducted. Here, we used metabolic dropouts and labeling strategies to determine how activated fibroblasts utilize arginine. We found that arginine limitation leads to activation of GCN2 while inhibiting TGF-β-induced mTORC1 activation and collagen protein production. Extracellular citrulline could rescue the effect of arginine deprivation in an ASS1-dependent manner. Using metabolic tracers of arginine and its precursors, we found little evidence of arginine synthesis or catabolism in lung fibroblasts treated with TGF-β. Extracellular ornithine or glutamine were the primary sources of ornithine and polyamines, not arginine. Our findings suggest that the major role for arginine in lung fibroblasts is for charging of arginyl-tRNAs and for promotion of mTOR signaling.
Highlights
Arginine depletion inhibits TGF-β-induced transcription in human lung fibroblasts (HLFs).
Arginine is not significantly catabolized in HLFs either through NOS or ARG dependent pathways.
Extracellular glutamine and ornithine are the primary sources of polyamines in lung fibroblasts.
The primary role of arginine in lung fibroblasts is for signaling through mTOR and GNC2.