Glycolysis: An early marker for vancomycin‐specific T‐cell activation

Author:

Gardner Joshua1ORCID,Hammond Sean2,Jensen Rebecca1ORCID,Gibson Andrew3,Krantz Matthew S.4,Ardern‐Jones Michael5,Phillips Elizabeth J.4,Pirmohamed Munir1,Chadwick Amy E.1,Betts Catherine6,Naisbitt Dean J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Centre for Drug Safety Science University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

2. ApconiX Alderley Edge UK

3. Murdoch University Institute for Immunology & Infectious Diseases Perth Western Australia Australia

4. Vanderbilt Institute for Infection, Immunology and Inflammation Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

5. Clinical Experimental Sciences University of Southampton Faculty of Medicine, Sir Henry Wellcome Laboratories, Southampton General Hospital Southampton UK

6. Clinical Pharmacology & Safety Sciences AstraZeneca R&D Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundVancomycin, a glycopeptide antibiotic used for Gram‐positive bacterial infections, has been linked with drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) in HLA‐A*32:01‐expressing individuals. This is associated with activation of T lymphocytes, for which glycolysis has been isolated as a fuel pathway following antigenic stimulation. However, the metabolic processes that underpin drug‐reactive T‐cell activation are currently undefined and may shed light on the energetic conditions needed for the elicitation of drug hypersensitivity or tolerogenic pathways. Here, we sought to characterise the immunological and metabolic pathways involved in drug‐specific T‐cell activation within the context of DRESS pathogenesis using vancomycin as model compound and drug‐reactive T‐cell clones (TCCs) generated from healthy donors and vancomycin‐hypersensitive patients.MethodsCD4+ and CD8+ vancomycin‐responsive TCCs were generated by serial dilution. The Seahorse XFe96 Analyzer was used to measure the extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) as an indicator of glycolytic function. Additionally, T‐cell proliferation and cytokine release (IFN‐γ) assay were utilised to correlate the bioenergetic characteristics of T‐cell activation with in vitro assays.ResultsModel T‐cell stimulants induced non‐specific T‐cell activation, characterised by immediate augmentation of ECAR and rate of ATP production (JATPglyc). There was a dose‐dependent and drug‐specific glycolytic shift when vancomycin‐reactive TCCs were exposed to the drug. Vancomycin‐reactive TCCs did not exhibit T‐cell cross‐reactivity with structurally similar compounds within proliferative and cytokine readouts. However, cross‐reactivity was observed when analysing energetic responses; TCCs with prior specificity for vancomycin were also found to exhibit glycolytic switching after exposure to teicoplanin. Glycolytic activation of TCC was HLA restricted, as exposure to HLA blockade attenuated the glycolytic induction.ConclusionThese studies describe the glycolytic shift of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells following vancomycin exposure. Since similar glycolytic switching is observed with teicoplanin, which did not activate T cells, it is possible the master switch for T‐cell activation is located upstream of metabolic signalling.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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