M

Martin Vaeth

University of Würzburg

ORCID: 0000-0001-8974-7052

Publishes on Immune Cell Function and Interaction, T-cell and B-cell Immunology, Ion Channels and Receptors. 97 papers and 4.3k citations.

97Publications
4.3kTotal Citations
#6in T Cell Engineering

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Top publicationsby citations

Mitochondrial dysfunction promotes the transition of precursor to terminally exhausted T cells through HIF-1α-mediated glycolytic reprogramming
Hao Wu, Xiufeng Zhao, Sophia M. Hochrein et al.|Nature Communications|2023
Cited by 261Open Access

T cell exhaustion is a hallmark of cancer and persistent infections, marked by inhibitory receptor upregulation, diminished cytokine secretion, and impaired cytolytic activity. Terminally exhausted T cells are steadily replenished by a precursor population (Tpex), but the metabolic principles governing Tpex maintenance and the regulatory circuits that control their exhaustion remain incompletely understood. Using a combination of gene-deficient mice, single-cell transcriptomics, and metabolomic analyses, we show that mitochondrial insufficiency is a cell-intrinsic trigger that initiates the functional exhaustion of T cells. At the molecular level, we find that mitochondrial dysfunction causes redox stress, which inhibits the proteasomal degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) and promotes the transcriptional and metabolic reprogramming of Tpex cells into terminally exhausted T cells. Our findings also bear clinical significance, as metabolic engineering of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells is a promising strategy to enhance the stemness and functionality of Tpex cells for cancer immunotherapy.

NFATc1 controls the cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells
Stefan Klein‐Hessling, Khalid Muhammad, Matthias Klein et al.|Nature Communications|2017
Cited by 200Open Access

Abstract Cytotoxic T lymphocytes are effector CD8 + T cells that eradicate infected and malignant cells. Here we show that the transcription factor NFATc1 controls the cytotoxicity of mouse cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Activation of Nfatc1 −/− cytotoxic T lymphocytes showed a defective cytoskeleton organization and recruitment of cytosolic organelles to immunological synapses. These cells have reduced cytotoxicity against tumor cells, and mice with NFATc1-deficient T cells are defective in controlling Listeria infection. Transcriptome analysis shows diminished RNA levels of numerous genes in Nfatc1 −/− CD8 + T cells, including Tbx21 , Gzmb and genes encoding cytokines and chemokines, and genes controlling glycolysis. Nfatc1 −/− , but not Nfatc2 −/− CD8 + T cells have an impaired metabolic switch to glycolysis, which can be restored by IL-2. Genome-wide ChIP-seq shows that NFATc1 binds many genes that control cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity. Together these data indicate that NFATc1 is an important regulator of cytotoxic T lymphocyte effector functions.

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