[PDF][PDF] The energy sensor AMPK regulates T cell metabolic adaptation and effector responses in vivo

J Blagih, F Coulombe, EE Vincent, F Dupuy… - Immunity, 2015 - cell.com
J Blagih, F Coulombe, EE Vincent, F Dupuy, G Galicia-Vázquez, E Yurchenko, TC Raissi…
Immunity, 2015cell.com
Naive T cells undergo metabolic reprogramming to support the increased energetic and
biosynthetic demands of effector T cell function. However, how nutrient availability
influences T cell metabolism and function remains poorly understood. Here we report
plasticity in effector T cell metabolism in response to changing nutrient availability. Activated
T cells were found to possess a glucose-sensitive metabolic checkpoint controlled by the
energy sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) that regulated mRNA translation and …
Summary
Naive T cells undergo metabolic reprogramming to support the increased energetic and biosynthetic demands of effector T cell function. However, how nutrient availability influences T cell metabolism and function remains poorly understood. Here we report plasticity in effector T cell metabolism in response to changing nutrient availability. Activated T cells were found to possess a glucose-sensitive metabolic checkpoint controlled by the energy sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) that regulated mRNA translation and glutamine-dependent mitochondrial metabolism to maintain T cell bioenergetics and viability. T cells lacking AMPKα1 displayed reduced mitochondrial bioenergetics and cellular ATP in response to glucose limitation in vitro or pathogenic challenge in vivo. Finally, we demonstrated that AMPKα1 is essential for T helper 1 (Th1) and Th17 cell development and primary T cell responses to viral and bacterial infections in vivo. Our data highlight AMPK-dependent regulation of metabolic homeostasis as a key regulator of T cell-mediated adaptive immunity.
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