Abstract
T cell-mediated immune responses are compromised in aged individuals, leading to increased morbidity and reduced response to vaccination. While cellular metabolism tightly regulates T cell activation and function, metabolic reprogramming in aged T cells has not been thoroughly studied. Here, we report a systematic analysis of metabolism during young versus aged naïve T cell activation. We observed a decrease in the number and activation of naïve T cells isolated from aged mice. While young T cells demonstrated robust mitochondrial biogenesis and respiration upon activation, aged T cells generated smaller mitochondria with lower respiratory capacity. Using quantitative proteomics, we defined the aged T cell proteome and discovered a specific deficit in the induction of enzymes of one-carbon metabolism. The activation of aged naïve T cells was enhanced by addition of products of one-carbon metabolism (formate and glycine). These studies define mechanisms of skewed metabolic remodeling in aged T cells and provide evidence that modulation of metabolism has the potential to promote immune function in aged individuals.
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Ron-Harel, N., Notarangelo, G., Ghergurovich, J. M., Paulo, J. A., Sage, P. T., Santos, D., … Haigis, M. C. (2018). Defective respiration and one-carbon metabolism contribute to impaired naïve T cell activation in aged mice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(52), 13347–13352. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1804149115
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