Divergent Impact of Glucose Availability on Human Virus-Specific and Generically Activated CD8 T Cells

Publication date

2020-11-13

Authors

Sanchez, Jenifer
Jackson, Ian
Flaherty, Katie R
Muliaditan, TamaraISNI 0000000492796754
Schurich, Anna

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

Upon activation T cells engage glucose metabolism to fuel the costly effector functions needed for a robust immune response. Consequently, the availability of glucose can impact on T cell function. The glucose concentrations used in conventional culture media and common metabolic assays are often artificially high, representing hyperglycaemic levels rarely present in vivo. We show here that reducing glucose concentration to physiological levels in culture differentially impacted on virus-specific compared to generically activated human CD8 T cell responses. In virus-specific T cells, limiting glucose availability significantly reduced the frequency of effector-cytokine producing T cells, but promoted the upregulation of CD69 and CD103 associated with an increased capacity for tissue retention. In contrast the functionality of generically activated T cells was largely unaffected and these showed reduced differentiation towards a residency phenotype. Furthermore, T cells being cultured at physiological glucose concentrations were more susceptible to viral infection. This setting resulted in significantly improved lentiviral transduction rates of primary cells. Our data suggest that CD8 T cells are exquisitely adapted to their niche and provide a reminder of the need to better mimic physiological conditions to study the complex nature of the human CD8 T cell immune response.

Keywords

glucose metabolism, virus-specific CD8 T cell, culture condition, EBV, influenza, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Sanchez, J, Jackson, I, Flaherty, K R, Muliaditan, T & Schurich, A 2020, 'Divergent Impact of Glucose Availability on Human Virus-Specific and Generically Activated CD8 T Cells', Metabolites, vol. 10, no. 11, 461. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo10110461