ACC1 determines memory potential of individual CD4+ T cells by regulating de novo fatty acid biosynthesis

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Abstract

Immunological memory is central to adaptive immunity and protection from disease. Changing metabolic demands as antigen-specific T cells transition from effector to memory cells have been well documented, but the cell-specific pathways and molecules that govern this transition are poorly defined. Here we show that genetic deletion of ACC1, a rate-limiting enzyme in fatty acid biosynthesis, enhances the formation of CD4+ T memory cells. ACC1-deficient effector helper T (Th) cells have similar metabolic signatures to wild-type memory Th cells, and expression of the gene encoding ACC1, Acaca, was inversely correlated with a memory gene signature in individual cells. Inhibition of ACC1 function enhances memory T cell formation during parasite infection in mice. Using single-cell analyses we identify a memory precursor–enriched population (CCR7hiCD137lo) present during early differentiation of effector CD4+ T cells. Our data indicate that fatty acid metabolism directs cell fate determination during the generation of memory CD4+ T cells.

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Endo, Y., Onodera, A., Obata-Ninomiya, K., Koyama-Nasu, R., Asou, H. K., Ito, T., … Nakayama, T. (2019). ACC1 determines memory potential of individual CD4+ T cells by regulating de novo fatty acid biosynthesis. Nature Metabolism, 1(2), 261–275. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-018-0025-4

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