Glucose represses dendritic cell-induced T cell responses
Lawless, Simon J.; Kedia-Mehta, Nidhi; Walls, Jessica F.; McGarrigle, Ryan; Convery, Orla; Sinclair, Linda V.; Navarro, Maria N.; Murray, James; Finlay, David K.
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
2017
VL / 8 - BP / - EP /
abstract
Glucose and glycolysis are important for the proinflammatory functions of many immune cells, and depletion of glucose in pathological microenvironments is associated with defective immune responses. Here we show a contrasting function for glucose in dendritic cells (DCs), as glucose represses the proinflammatory output of LPS-stimulated DCs and inhibits DC-induced T-cell responses. A glucose-sensitive signal transduction circuit involving the mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1), HIF1 alpha and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) coordinates DC metabolism and function to limit DC-stimulated T-cell responses. When multiple T cells interact with a DC, they compete for nutrients, which can limit glucose availability to the DCs. In such DCs, glucose-dependent signalling is inhibited, altering DC outputs and enhancing T-cell responses. These data reveal a mechanism by which T cells regulate the DC microenvironment to control DC-induced T-cell responses and indicate that glucose is an important signal for shaping immune responses.
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