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Serine Is an Essential Metabolite for Effector T Cell Expansion.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Ma, Eric H 
Bantug, Glenn 
Griss, Takla 
Condotta, Stephanie 
Johnson, Radia M 

Abstract

During immune challenge, T lymphocytes engage pathways of anabolic metabolism to support clonal expansion and the development of effector functions. Here we report a critical role for the non-essential amino acid serine in effector T cell responses. Upon activation, T cells upregulate enzymes of the serine, glycine, one-carbon (SGOC) metabolic network, and rapidly increase processing of serine into one-carbon metabolism. We show that extracellular serine is required for optimal T cell expansion even in glucose concentrations sufficient to support T cell activation, bioenergetics, and effector function. Restricting dietary serine impairs pathogen-driven expansion of T cells in vivo, without affecting overall immune cell homeostasis. Mechanistically, serine supplies glycine and one-carbon units for de novo nucleotide biosynthesis in proliferating T cells, and one-carbon units from formate can rescue T cells from serine deprivation. Our data implicate serine as a key immunometabolite that directly modulates adaptive immunity by controlling T cell proliferative capacity.

Description

Keywords

Phgdh, Shmt, T cell, glycolysis, immunometabolism, immunotherapy, metabolic reprogramming, metabolism, serine, serine biosynthesis, Animals, Carbon, Cell Cycle Checkpoints, Cell Proliferation, Diet, Energy Metabolism, Extracellular Space, Glycine, Listeria monocytogenes, Metabolic Networks and Pathways, Metabolome, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Purine Nucleotides, Serine, T-Lymphocytes

Journal Title

Cell Metab

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1550-4131
1932-7420

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
MRC (unknown)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12022/6)