Proteasome activity regulates CD8+ T lymphocyte metabolism and fate specification.

Journal: The Journal Of Clinical Investigation
Published:
Abstract

During an immune response, CD8+ T lymphocytes can undergo asymmetric division, giving rise to daughter cells that exhibit distinct tendencies to adopt terminal effector and memory cell fates. Here we show that "pre-effector" and "pre-memory" cells resulting from the first CD8+ T cell division in vivo exhibited low and high rates of endogenous proteasome activity, respectively. Pharmacologic reduction of proteasome activity in CD8+ T cells early during differentiation resulted in acquisition of terminal effector cell characteristics, whereas enhancement of proteasome activity conferred attributes of memory lymphocytes. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses revealed that modulating proteasome activity in CD8+ T cells affected cellular metabolism. These metabolic changes were mediated, in part, through differential expression of Myc, a transcription factor that controls glycolysis and metabolic reprogramming. Taken together, these results demonstrate that proteasome activity is an important regulator of CD8+ T cell fate and raise the possibility that increasing proteasome activity may be a useful therapeutic strategy to enhance the generation of memory lymphocytes.

Authors
Christella Widjaja, Jocelyn Olvera, Patrick Metz, Anthony Phan, Jeffrey Savas, Gerjan De Bruin, Yves Leestemaker, Celia Berkers, Annemieke De Jong, Bogdan Florea, Kathleen Fisch, Justine Lopez, Stephanie Kim, Daniel Garcia, Stephen Searles, Jack Bui, Aaron Chang, John Yates, Ananda Goldrath, Hermen Overkleeft, Huib Ovaa, John Chang