Product Citations: 4

T cell metabolic reprogramming in acute kidney injury and protection by glutamine blockade.

In JCI Insight on 22 June 2023 by Lee, K., Thompson, E. A., et al.

T cells play an important role in acute kidney injury (AKI). Metabolic programming of T cells regulates their function, is a rapidly emerging field, and is unknown in AKI. We induced ischemic AKI in C57BL/6J mice and collected kidneys and spleens at multiple time points. T cells were isolated and analyzed by an immune-metabolic assay. Unbiased machine learning analyses identified a distinct T cell subset with reduced voltage-dependent anion channel 1 and mTOR expression in post-AKI kidneys. Ischemic kidneys showed higher expression of trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 27 and glutaminase. Splenic T cells from post-AKI mice had higher expression of glucose transporter 1, hexokinase II, and carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1a. Human nonischemic and ischemic kidney tissue displayed similar findings to mouse kidneys. Given a convergent role for glutamine in T cell metabolic pathways and the availability of a relatively safe glutamine antagonist, JHU083, effects on AKI were evaluated. JHU083 attenuated renal injury and reduced T cell activation and proliferation in ischemic and nephrotoxic AKI, whereas T cell-deficient mice were not protected by glutamine blockade. In vitro hypoxia demonstrated upregulation of glycolysis-related enzymes. T cells undergo metabolic reprogramming during AKI, and reconstitution of metabolism by targeting T cell glutamine pathway could be a promising novel therapeutic approach.

  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cell Biology
  • Immunology and Microbiology

A neomorphic mutation in the interferon activation domain of IRF4 causes a dominant primary immunodeficiency.

In The Journal of Experimental Medicine on 5 June 2023 by Thouenon, R., Chentout, L., et al.

Here, we report on a heterozygous interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) missense variant identified in three patients from a multigeneration family with hypogammaglobulinemia. Patients' low blood plasmablast/plasma cell and naïve CD4 and CD8 T cell counts contrasted with high terminal effector CD4 and CD8 T cell counts. Expression of the mutant IRF4 protein in control lymphoblastoid B cell lines reduced the expression of BLIMP-1 and XBP1 (key transcription factors in plasma cell differentiation). In B cell lines, the mutant IRF4 protein as wildtype was found to bind to known IRF4 binding motifs. The mutant IRF4 failed to efficiently regulate the transcriptional activity of interferon-stimulated response elements (ISREs). Rapid immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry of endogenous proteins indicated that the mutant and wildtype IRF4 proteins differed with regard to their respective sets of binding partners. Our findings highlight a novel mechanism for autosomal-dominant primary immunodeficiency through altered protein binding by mutant IRF4 at ISRE, leading to defective plasma cell differentiation.
© 2023 Thouenon et al.

  • Immunology and Microbiology

Reprogramming of Tumor-reactive Tumor-infiltrating Lymphocytes to Human-induced Pluripotent Stem Cells.

In Cancer Res Commun on 1 May 2023 by Islam, S. M. R., Maeda, T., et al.

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) that can recognize and kill tumor cells have curative potential in subsets of patients treated with adoptive cell transfer (ACT). However, lack of TIL therapeutic efficacy in many patients may be due in large part to a paucity of tumor-reactive T cells in TIL and the exhausted and terminally differentiated status of those tumor-reactive T cells. We sought to reprogram exhausted TIL that possess T-cell receptors (TCR) specific for tumor antigens into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) to rejuvenate them for more potent ACT. We first attempted to reprogram tumor neoantigen-specific TIL by αCD3 Ab prestimulation which resulted in failure of establishing tumor-reactive TIL-iPSCs, instead, T cell-derived iPSCs from bystander T cells were established. To selectively activate and enrich tumor-reactive T cells from the heterogenous TIL population, CD8+ PD-1+ 4-1BB+ TIL population were isolated after coculture with autologous tumor cells, followed by direct reprogramming into iPSCs. TCR sequencing analysis of the resulting iPSC clones revealed that reprogrammed TIL-iPSCs encoded TCRs that were identical to the pre-identified tumor-reactive TCRs found in minimally cultured TIL. Moreover, reprogrammed TIL-iPSCs contained rare tumor antigen-specific TCRs, which were not detectable by TCR sequencing of the starting cell population. Thus, reprogramming of PD-1+ 4-1BB+ TIL after coculture with autologous tumor cells selectively generates tumor antigen-specific TIL-iPSCs, and is a distinctive method to enrich and identify tumor antigen-specific TCRs of low frequency from TIL.
Reprogramming of TIL into iPSC holds great promise for the future treatment of cancer due to their rejuvenated nature and the retention of tumor-specific TCRs. One limitation is the lack of selective and efficient methods for reprogramming tumor-specific T cells from polyclonal TIL. Here we addressed this limitation and present a method to efficiently reprogram TIL into iPSC colonies carrying diverse tumor antigen reactive TCR recombination.
© 2023 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.

  • Cancer Research
  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology

Metabolic programs define dysfunctional immune responses in severe COVID-19 patients.

In Cell Reports on 16 March 2021 by Thompson, E. A., Cascino, K., et al.

It is unclear why some SARS-CoV-2 patients readily resolve infection while others develop severe disease. By interrogating metabolic programs of immune cells in severe and recovered coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients compared with other viral infections, we identify a unique population of T cells. These T cells express increased Voltage-Dependent Anion Channel 1 (VDAC1), accompanied by gene programs and functional characteristics linked to mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis. The percentage of these cells increases in elderly patients and correlates with lymphopenia. Importantly, T cell apoptosis is inhibited in vitro by targeting the oligomerization of VDAC1 or blocking caspase activity. We also observe an expansion of myeloid-derived suppressor cells with unique metabolic phenotypes specific to COVID-19, and their presence distinguishes severe from mild disease. Overall, the identification of these metabolic phenotypes provides insight into the dysfunctional immune response in acutely ill COVID-19 patients and provides a means to predict and track disease severity and/or design metabolic therapeutic regimens.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cell Biology
  • COVID-19
  • Immunology and Microbiology
View this product on CiteAb