17 research outputs found

    Acetate Promotes T Cell Effector Function during Glucose Restriction.

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    Competition for nutrients like glucose can metabolically restrict T cells and contribute to their hyporesponsiveness during cancer. Metabolic adaptation to the surrounding microenvironment is therefore key for maintaining appropriate cell function. For instance, cancer cells use acetate as a substrate alternative to glucose to fuel metabolism and growth. Here, we show that acetate rescues effector function in glucose-restricted CD8+ T cells. Mechanistically, acetate promotes histone acetylation and chromatin accessibility and enhances IFN-γ gene transcription and cytokine production in an acetyl-CoA synthetase (ACSS)-dependent manner. Ex vivo acetate treatment increases IFN-γ production by exhausted T cells, whereas reducing ACSS expression in T cells impairs IFN-γ production by tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and tumor clearance. Thus, hyporesponsive T cells can be epigenetically remodeled and reactivated by acetate, suggesting that pathways regulating the use of substrates alternative to glucose could be therapeutically targeted to promote T cell function during cancer

    Glucose and glutamine fuel protein O-GlcNAcylation to control T cell self-renewal and malignancy

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    Sustained glucose and glutamine transport are essential for activated T lymphocytes to support ATP and macromolecule biosynthesis. We now show that glutamine and glucose also fuel an indispensible dynamic regulation of intracellular protein O-GlcNAcylation at key stages of T cell development, transformation and differentiation. Glucose and glutamine are precursors of UDP-GlcNAc, a substrate for cellular glycosyltransferases. Immune activated T cells contained higher concentrations of UDP-GlcNAc and increased intracellular protein O-GlcNAcylation controlled by the enzyme O-GlcNAc glycosyltransferase as compared to naïve cells. We identified Notch, the T cell antigen receptor and c-Myc as key controllers of T cell protein O-GlcNAcylation, via regulation of glucose and glutamine transport. Loss of O-GlcNAc transferase blocked T cell progenitor renewal, malignant transformation, and peripheral T cell clonal expansion. Nutrient-dependent signaling pathways regulated by O-GlcNAc glycosyltransferase are thus fundamental for T cell biology

    The cytotoxic T cell proteome and its shaping by the kinase mTOR

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    High-resolution mass spectrometry maps the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) proteome and the impact of mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) on CTLs. The CTL proteome was dominated by metabolic regulators and granzymes and mTORC1 selectively repressed and promoted expression of subset of CTL proteins (~10%). These included key CTL effector molecules, signaling proteins and a subset of metabolic enzymes. Proteomic data highlighted the potential for mTORC1 negative control of phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate (PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3)) production in CTL. mTORC1 was shown to repress PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3) production and to determine the mTORC2 requirement for activation of the kinase Akt. Unbiased proteomic analysis thus provides a comprehensive understanding of CTL identity and mTORC1 control of CTL function

    Tofacitinib Suppresses IL-10/IL-10R Signaling and Modulates Host Defense Responses in Human Macrophages

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    Jak inhibitors are increasingly used in dermatology. Despite broad inhibitory effects on cytokine signaling cascades, they only modestly increase the risk for infectious diseases. To address the molecular mechanisms underlying this unexpected clinical observation, we investigated how tofacintib (tofa), a first-in-class Jak inhibitor, regulates host defense responses in toll-like receptor 4-activated human macrophages. Specifically, we asked whether tofa inhibits anti-inflammatory IL-10 signaling, thereby counteracting the downregulation of inflammatory, host-protective pathways. We found that tofa blocked macrophage responses to IL-10 at the level of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 phosphorylation. Furthermore, toll-like receptor 4-induced, autocrine/paracrine IL-10/IL-10R activation promoted the expression of hepcidin, the master regulator of iron metabolism, resulting in intracellular iron sequestration. In contrast, autocrine/paracrine IL-10/IL-10R activation repressed the expression of cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide as well as antigen-presenting molecules, thus together, inducing a pathogen-favoring environment. Although tofa further repressed cathelicidin, it prevented the induction of intracellular HAMP and restored the expression of antigen-presentation molecules in toll-like receptor 4-activated macrophages. Our study supports the concept that induction of IL10/IL-10R signaling drives a complex immune evasion strategy of intracellular microbes. Moreover, we conclude that tofa has diverging effects on macrophage host response pathways, and we identify the toll-like receptor 4-IL-10-signal transducer and activator of transcription 3-HAMP axis as a potential therapeutic target to counteract immune evasion

    Polyamine metabolism is a central determinant of helper T cell lineage fidelity

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    Polyamine synthesis represents one of the most profound metabolic changes during T cell activation, but the biological implications of this are scarcely known. Here, we show that polyamine metabolism is a fundamental process governing the ability of CD4+ helper T cells (TH) to polarize into different functional fates. Deficiency in ornithine decarboxylase, a crucial enzyme for polyamine synthesis, results in a severe failure of CD4+ T cells to adopt correct subset specification, underscored by ectopic expression of multiple cytokines and lineage-defining transcription factors across TH cell subsets. Polyamines control TH differentiation by providing substrates for deoxyhypusine synthase, which synthesizes the amino acid hypusine, and mice in which T cells are deficient for hypusine develop severe intestinal inflammatory disease. Polyamine-hypusine deficiency caused widespread epigenetic remodeling driven by alterations in histone acetylation and a re-wired tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Thus, polyamine metabolism is critical for maintaining the epigenome to focus TH cell subset fidelity

    Plasmacytoid dendritic cell activation is dependent on coordinated expression of distinct amino acid transporters

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    Human plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent cells implicated in autoimmunity, but the role of IL-3 in pDC biology is poorly understood. We found that IL-3-induced Janus kinase 2 dependent expression of SLC7A5 and SLC3A2, which comprise the large neutral amino acid transporter, was required for mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) nutrient sensor activation in response to toll-like receptor agonists. mTORC1 facilitated increased anabolic activity resulting in type I interferon, tumor necrosis factor, and chemokine production and the expression of the cystine transporter SLC7A11. Loss of function of these amino acid transporters synergistically blocked cytokine production by pDCs. Comparison of in vitro-activated pDCs with those from lupus nephritis lesions identified not only SLC7A5, SLC3A2, and SLC7A11 but also ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase-phosphodiesterase 2 (ENPP2) as components of a shared transcriptional signature, and ENPP2 inhibition also blocked cytokine production. Our data identify additional therapeutic targets for autoimmune diseases in which pDCs are implicated

    Metabolic conditioning of CD8(+) effector T cells for adoptive cell therapy

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    CD8(+) effector T (T-E) cell proliferation and cytokine production depends on enhanced glucose metabolism. However, circulating T cells continuously adapt to glucose fluctuations caused by diet and inter-organ metabolite exchange. Here we show that transient glucose restriction (TGR) in activated CD8(+) T-E cells metabolically primes effector functions and enhances tumour clearance in mice. Tumour-specific TGR CD8(+) T-E cells co-cultured with tumour spheroids in replete conditions display enhanced effector molecule expression, and adoptive transfer of these cells in a murine lymphoma model leads to greater numbers of immunologically functional circulating donor cells and complete tumour clearance. Mechanistically, T-E cells treated with TGR undergo metabolic remodelling that, after glucose re-exposure, supports enhanced glucose uptake, increased carbon allocation to the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) and a cellular redox shift towards a more reduced state-all indicators of a more anabolic programme to support their enhanced functionality. Thus, metabolic conditioning could be used to promote efficiency of T-cell products for adoptive cellular therapy

    An LKB1-mitochondria axis controls T(H)17 effector function

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    CD4(+) T cell differentiation requires metabolic reprogramming to fulfil the bioenergetic demands of proliferation and effector function, and enforce specific transcriptional programmes(1-3). Mitochondrial membrane dynamics sustains mitochondrial processes(4), including respiration and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolism(5), but whether mitochondrial membrane remodelling orchestrates CD4(+) T cell differentiation remains unclear. Here we show that unlike other CD4(+) T cell subsets, T helper 17 (T(H)17) cells have fused mitochondria with tight cristae. T cell-specific deletion of optic atrophy 1 (OPA1), which regulates inner mitochondrial membrane fusion and cristae morphology(6), revealed that T(H)17 cells require OPA1 for its control of the TCA cycle, rather than respiration. OPA1 deletion amplifies glutamine oxidation, leading to impaired NADH/NAD(+) balance and accumulation of TCA cycle metabolites and 2-hydroxyglutarate-a metabolite that influences the epigenetic landscape(5,7). Our multi-omics approach revealed that the serine/threonine kinase liver-associated kinase B1 (LKB1) couples mitochondrial function to cytokine expression in T(H)17 cells by regulating TCA cycle metabolism and transcriptional remodelling. Mitochondrial membrane disruption activates LKB1, which restrains IL-17 expression. LKB1 deletion restores IL-17 expression in T(H)17 cells with disrupted mitochondrial membranes, rectifying aberrant TCA cycle glutamine flux, balancing NADH/NAD(+) and preventing 2-hydroxyglutarate production from the promiscuous activity of the serine biosynthesis enzyme phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH). These findings identify OPA1 as a major determinant of T(H)17 cell function, and uncover LKB1 as a sensor linking mitochondrial cues to effector programmes in T(H)17 cells
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