Abstract
AbstractPathogenic mitochondrial (mt)DNA molecules can exhibit heteroplasmy in single cells and cause a range of clinical phenotypes, although their contribution to immunity is poorly understood. Here, in mice carrying heteroplasmic C5024T in mt-tRNAAla – that impairs oxidative phosphorylation – we found a reduced mutation burden in peripheral T and B memory lymphocyte subsets, compared to their naïve counterparts. Furthermore, selection diluting the mutation was induced in vitro by triggering T and B cell antigen receptors. While C5024T dysregulated naïve CD8+ T cell respiration and metabolic remodeling post-activation, these phenotypes were partially ameliorated by selection. Analogous to mice, peripheral blood memory T and B lymphocyte subsets from human MELAS (Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy with Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like episodes) patients – carrying heteroplasmic A3243G in mt-tRNALeu – displayed a reduced mutation burden, compared to naïve cells. In both humans and mice, mtDNA selection was observed in IgG+ antigen-specific B cells after SARS-CoV-2 Spike vaccination, illustrating an on-going process in vivo. Taken together, these data illustrate purifying selection of pathogenic mtDNA variants during the oxidative phosphorylation checkpoints of the naïve-memory lymphocyte transition.HighlightsIn human MELAS patients (A3243G in mt-tRNALeu) and a related mouse model (C5024T in mt-tRNAAla), T and B memory subsets displayed a reduced mtDNA mutation burden compared to their naïve counterparts.Selection was observed in antigen-specific IgG+ B cells after SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein vaccination.T and B cell antigen receptor stimulation triggered purifying selection in vitro, facilitating mechanistic studies of mtDNA selection.Heteroplasmic pathogenic mutations in mtDNA dysregulated metabolic remodeling after lymphocyte activation and reduced macrophage OXPHOS capacity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory