OXPHOS promotes apoptotic resistance and cellular persistence in T <sub>H</sub> 17 cells in the periphery and tumor microenvironment

Hanna S. Hong(University of Michigan), Nneka E. Mbah(University of Michigan), Mengrou Shan(University of Michigan), Kristen Loesel(University of Michigan), Lin Lin(University of Michigan), Peter Sajjakulnukit(University of Michigan), Luis O. Correa(University of Michigan), Anthony Andren(University of Michigan), Jason Lin(University of Michigan), Atsushi Hayashi(University of Michigan), Brian Magnuson(University of Michigan), Judy Chen(University of Michigan), Zhaoheng Li(Michigan State University), Yuying Xie(Michigan State University), Li Zhang(University of Michigan), Daniel R. Goldstein(University of Michigan), Shannon A. Carty(University of Michigan), Yu L. Lei(University of Michigan), Anthony W. Opipari(University of Michigan), Rafael J. Argüello(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Ilona Kryczek(University of Michigan), Nobuhiko Kamada(University of Michigan), Weiping Zou(University of Michigan), Luigi Franchi(University of Michigan), Costas A. Lyssiotis(University of Michigan)
Science Immunology
November 18, 2022
Cited by 107Open Access
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Abstract

T cell proliferation and cytokine production are bioenergetically and biosynthetically costly. The inability to meet these metabolic demands results in altered differentiation, accompanied by impaired effector function, and attrition of the immune response. Interleukin-17–producing CD4 T cells (T H 17s) are mediators of host defense, autoimmunity, and antitumor immunity in the setting of adoptive T cell therapy. T H 17s are long-lived cells that require mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) for effector function in vivo. Considering that T H 17s polarized under standardized culture conditions are predominately glycolytic, little is known about how OXPHOS regulates T H 17 processes, such as their ability to persist and thus contribute to protracted immune responses. Here, we modified standardized culture medium and identified a culture system that reliably induces OXPHOS dependence in T H 17s. We found that T H 17s cultured under OXPHOS conditions metabolically resembled their in vivo counterparts, whereas glycolytic cultures were dissimilar. OXPHOS T H 17s exhibited increased mitochondrial fitness, glutamine anaplerosis, and an antiapoptotic phenotype marked by high BCL-XL and low BIM. Limited mitophagy, mediated by mitochondrial fusion regulator OPA-1, was critical to apoptotic resistance in OXPHOS T H 17s. By contrast, glycolytic T H 17s exhibited more mitophagy and an imbalance in BCL-XL to BIM, thereby priming them for apoptosis. In addition, through adoptive transfer experiments, we demonstrated that OXPHOS protected T H 17s from apoptosis while enhancing their persistence in the periphery and tumor microenvironment in a murine model of melanoma. Together, our work demonstrates how metabolism regulates T H 17 cell fate and highlights the potential for therapies that target OXPHOS in T H 17-driven diseases.


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