Maladaptive T-Cell Metabolic Fitness in Autoimmune Diseases

Author:

Antony Irene Rose12ORCID,Wong Brandon Han Siang13ORCID,Kelleher Dermot14,Verma Navin Kumar15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 308232, Singapore

2. Vellore Institute of Technology, Vellore 632014, India

3. Interdisciplinary Graduate Programme, NTU Institute for Health Technologies (HealthTech-NTU), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 637335, Singapore

4. Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

5. Skin Research Institute of Singapore, Singapore 308205, Singapore

Abstract

Immune surveillance and adaptive immune responses, involving continuously circulating and tissue-resident T-lymphocytes, provide host defense against infectious agents and possible malignant transformation while avoiding autoimmune tissue damage. Activation, migration, and deployment of T-cells to affected tissue sites are crucial for mounting an adaptive immune response. An effective adaptive immune defense depends on the ability of T-cells to dynamically reprogram their metabolic requirements in response to environmental cues. Inability of the T-cells to adapt to specific metabolic demands may skew cells to become either hyporesponsive (creating immunocompromised conditions) or hyperactive (causing autoimmune tissue destruction). Here, we review maladaptive T-cell metabolic fitness that can cause autoimmune diseases and discuss how T-cell metabolic programs can potentially be modulated to achieve therapeutic benefits.

Funder

Ministry of Education

National Research Foundation Singapore

Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council

Interdisciplinary Graduate Programme (HealthTech-NTU), Nanyang Technological University Singapore

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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