Characterization of the metabolic phenotype of chronically activated lymphocytes

DR Wahl, B Petersen, R Warner, BC Richardson… - Lupus, 2010 - journals.sagepub.com
DR Wahl, B Petersen, R Warner, BC Richardson, GD Glick, AW Opipari
Lupus, 2010journals.sagepub.com
Activated lymphocytes proliferate, secrete cytokines, and can make antibodies. Normally
activated B and T cells meet the bioenergetic demand for these processes by up-regulating
aerobic glycolysis. In contrast, several lines of evidence suggest that pathogenic
lymphocytes in autoimmune diseases like lupus meet ATP demands through oxidative
phosphorylation. Using 13C-glucose as a stable tracer, we found that splenocytes from mice
with lupus derive the same fraction of lactate from glucose as control animals, suggesting …
Activated lymphocytes proliferate, secrete cytokines, and can make antibodies. Normally activated B and T cells meet the bioenergetic demand for these processes by up-regulating aerobic glycolysis. In contrast, several lines of evidence suggest that pathogenic lymphocytes in autoimmune diseases like lupus meet ATP demands through oxidative phosphorylation. Using 13C-glucose as a stable tracer, we found that splenocytes from mice with lupus derive the same fraction of lactate from glucose as control animals, suggesting comparable levels of glycolysis and non-oxidative ATP production. However, lupus splenocytes increase glucose oxidation by 40% over healthy control animals. The ratio between pentose phosphate cycle (PPC) activity and glycolysis is the same for each group, indicating that increased glucose oxidation is due to increased activity of the TCA cycle in lupus splenocytes. Repetitive stimulation of cultured human T cells was used to model chronic lymphocyte activation, a phenotype associated with lupus. Chronically activated T cells rely primarily on oxidative metabolism for ATP synthesis suggesting that chronic antigen stimulation may be the basis for the metabolic findings observed in lupus mice. Identification of disease-related bioenergetic phenotypes should contribute to new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for immune diseases.
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