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Seon Ah Lim

Ewha Womans University

ORCID: 0000-0001-6560-4874

Publishes on Immune Cell Function and Interaction, CAR-T cell therapy research, Immunotherapy and Immune Responses. 67 papers and 3.1k citations.

67Publications
3.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

SLC38A2 and glutamine signalling in cDC1s dictate anti-tumour immunity
Chuansheng Guo, Zhiyuan You, Hao Shi et al.|Nature|2023
Cited by 253Open Access

Abstract Cancer cells evade T cell-mediated killing through tumour–immune interactions whose mechanisms are not well understood 1,2 . Dendritic cells (DCs), especially type-1 conventional DCs (cDC1s), mediate T cell priming and therapeutic efficacy against tumours 3 . DC functions are orchestrated by pattern recognition receptors 3–5 , although other signals involved remain incompletely defined. Nutrients are emerging mediators of adaptive immunity 6–8 , but whether nutrients affect DC function or communication between innate and adaptive immune cells is largely unresolved. Here we establish glutamine as an intercellular metabolic checkpoint that dictates tumour–cDC1 crosstalk and licenses cDC1 function in activating cytotoxic T cells. Intratumoral glutamine supplementation inhibits tumour growth by augmenting cDC1-mediated CD8 + T cell immunity, and overcomes therapeutic resistance to checkpoint blockade and T cell-mediated immunotherapies. Mechanistically, tumour cells and cDC1s compete for glutamine uptake via the transporter SLC38A2 to tune anti-tumour immunity. Nutrient screening and integrative analyses show that glutamine is the dominant amino acid in promoting cDC1 function. Further, glutamine signalling via FLCN impinges on TFEB function. Loss of FLCN in DCs selectively impairs cDC1 function in vivo in a TFEB-dependent manner and phenocopies SLC38A2 deficiency by eliminating the anti-tumour therapeutic effect of glutamine supplementation. Our findings establish glutamine-mediated intercellular metabolic crosstalk between tumour cells and cDC1s that underpins tumour immune evasion, and reveal glutamine acquisition and signalling in cDC1s as limiting events for DC activation and putative targets for cancer treatment.

Signaling networks in immunometabolism
Jordy Saravia, Jana Raynor, Nicole M. Chapman et al.|Cell Research|2020
Cited by 238Open Access

Adaptive immunity is essential for pathogen and tumor eradication, but may also trigger uncontrolled or pathological inflammation. T cell receptor, co-stimulatory and cytokine signals coordinately dictate specific signaling networks that trigger the activation and functional programming of T cells. In addition, cellular metabolism promotes T cell responses and is dynamically regulated through the interplay of serine/threonine kinases, immunological cues and nutrient signaling networks. In this review, we summarize the upstream regulators and signaling effectors of key serine/threonine kinase-mediated signaling networks, including PI3K-AGC kinases, mTOR and LKB1-AMPK pathways that regulate metabolism, especially in T cells. We also provide our perspectives about the pending questions and clinical applicability of immunometabolic signaling. Understanding the regulators and effectors of immunometabolic signaling networks may uncover therapeutic targets to modulate metabolic programming and T cell responses in human disease.