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Metabolic reprogramming of human CD8+ memory T cells through loss of SIRT1.


ABSTRACT: The expansion of CD8+CD28- T cells, a population of terminally differentiated memory T cells, is one of the most consistent immunological changes in humans during aging. CD8+CD28- T cells are highly cytotoxic, and their frequency is linked to many age-related diseases. As they do not accumulate in mice, many of the molecular mechanisms regulating their fate and function remain unclear. In this paper, we find that human CD8+CD28- T cells, under resting conditions, have an enhanced capacity to use glycolysis, a function linked to decreased expression of the NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase SIRT1. Global gene expression profiling identified the transcription factor FoxO1 as a SIRT1 target involved in transcriptional reprogramming of CD8+CD28- T cells. FoxO1 is proteasomally degraded in SIRT1-deficient CD8+CD28- T cells, and inhibiting its activity in resting CD8+CD28+ T cells enhanced glycolytic capacity and granzyme B production as in CD8+CD28- T cells. These data identify the evolutionarily conserved SIRT1-FoxO1 axis as a regulator of resting CD8+ memory T cell metabolism and activity in humans.

SUBMITTER: Jeng MY 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5748845 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Metabolic reprogramming of human CD8<sup>+</sup> memory T cells through loss of SIRT1.

Jeng Mark Y MY   Hull Philip A PA   Fei Mingjian M   Kwon Hye-Sook HS   Tsou Chia-Lin CL   Kasler Herb H   Ng Che-Ping CP   Gordon David E DE   Johnson Jeffrey J   Krogan Nevan N   Verdin Eric E   Ott Melanie M  

The Journal of experimental medicine 20171130 1


The expansion of CD8<sup>+</sup>CD28<sup>-</sup> T cells, a population of terminally differentiated memory T cells, is one of the most consistent immunological changes in humans during aging. CD8<sup>+</sup>CD28<sup>-</sup> T cells are highly cytotoxic, and their frequency is linked to many age-related diseases. As they do not accumulate in mice, many of the molecular mechanisms regulating their fate and function remain unclear. In this paper, we find that human CD8<sup>+</sup>CD28<sup>-</sup> T  ...[more]

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