journal article
Serine Is an Essential Metabolite for Effector T Cell Expansion.
Abstract
During immune challenge, T lymphocytes engage pathways of anabolic metabolism to support clonal expansion and the development of effector functions. Here we report a critical role for the non-essential amino acid serine in effector T cell responses. Upon activation, T cells upregulate enzymes of the serine, glycine, one-carbon (SGOC) metabolic network, and rapidly increase processing of serine into one-carbon metabolism. We show that extracellular serine is required for optimal T cell expansion even in glucose concentrations sufficient to support T cell activation, bioenergetics, and effector function. Restricting dietary serine impairs pathogen-driven expansion of T cells in vivo, without affecting overall immune cell homeostasis. Mechanistically, serine supplies glycine and one-carbon units for de novo nucleotide biosynthesis in proliferating T cells, and one-carbon units from formate can rescue T cells from serine deprivation. Our data implicate serine as a key immunometabolite that directly modulates adaptive immunity by controlling T cell proliferative capacity- http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
- Phgdh
- Shmt
- T cell
- glycolysis
- immunometabolism
- immunotherapy
- metabolic reprogramming
- metabolism
- serine
- serine biosynthesis
- Animals
- Carbon
- Cell Cycle Checkpoints
- Cell Proliferation
- Diet
- Energy Metabolism
- Extracellular Space
- Glycine
- Listeria monocytogenes
- Metabolic Networks and Pathways
- Metabolome
- Mice, Inbred C57BL
- Purine Nucleotides
- Serine
- T-Lymphocytes