Pyrimidine de novo synthesis inhibition selectively blocks effector but not memory T cell development

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Abstract

Blocking pyrimidine de novo synthesis by inhibiting dihydroorotate dehydrogenase is used to treat autoimmunity and prevent expansion of rapidly dividing cell populations including activated T cells. Here we show memory T cell precursors are resistant to pyrimidine starvation. Although the treatment effectively blocked effector T cells, the number, function and transcriptional profile of memory T cells and their precursors were unaffected. This effect occurred in a narrow time window in the early T cell expansion phase when developing effector, but not memory precursor, T cells are vulnerable to pyrimidine starvation. This vulnerability stems from a higher proliferative rate of early effector T cells as well as lower pyrimidine synthesis capacity when compared with memory precursors. This differential sensitivity is a drug-targetable checkpoint that efficiently diminishes effector T cells without affecting the memory compartment. This cell fate checkpoint might therefore lead to new methods to safely manipulate effector T cell responses.

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Scherer, S., Oberle, S. G., Kanev, K., Gerullis, A. K., Wu, M., de Almeida, G. P., … Zehn, D. (2023). Pyrimidine de novo synthesis inhibition selectively blocks effector but not memory T cell development. Nature Immunology, 24(3), 501–515. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-023-01436-x

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