OXPHOS Promotes Apoptotic Resistance and Persistence in TH17 cells

Author:

Hong Hanna S.,Mbah Nneka E.,Shan Mengrou,Loesel Kristen,Lin Lin,Sajjakulnukit Peter,Andren Anthony,Hayashi Atsushi,Magnuson Brian,Li Zhaoheng,Xie Yuying,Zhang Li,Lei Yu Leo,Opipari Anthony W.,Argüello Rafael J.ORCID,Kryczek Ilona,Kamada Nobuhiko,Zou Weiping,Franchi Luigi,Lyssiotis Costas A.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractApoptotic cell death is a cell-intrinsic, immune tolerance mechanism that regulates the magnitude and resolution of T cell-mediated responses. Evasion of apoptosis is critical for the generation of memory T cells, as well as autoimmune T cells, and knowledge of the mechanisms that enable resistance to apoptosis will provide insight into ways to modulate their activity during protective and pathogenic responses. IL-17-producing CD4 T cells (TH17s) are long-lived, memory cells. These features enable their role in host defense, chronic inflammatory disorders, and anti-tumor immunity. A growing number of reports now indicate that TH17s in vivo require mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), a metabolic phenotype that is poorly induced in vitro. To elucidate the role of OXPHOS in TH17 processes, we developed a system to polarize TH17s that metabolically resembled their in vivo counterparts. We discovered that directing TH17s to use OXPHOS promotes mitochondrial fitness, glutamine anaplerosis, and an anti-apoptotic phenotype marked by high BCL-XL and low BIM. Through competitive co-transfer experiments and tumor studies, we further revealed how OXPHOS protects TH17s from cell death while enhancing their persistence in the periphery and tumor microenvironment. Together, our work demonstrates a non-classical role of metabolism in regulating TH17 cell fate and highlights the potential for therapies that target OXPHOS in TH17-driven diseases.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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