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FXR mediates T cell-intrinsic responses to reduced feeding during infection

Clarissa Campbell, François Marchildon, Anthony Michaels, Naofumi Takemoto, Joris van der Veeken, Michail Schizas, Yuri Pritykin, Christina S. Leslie, Andrew M. Intlekofer, Paul Cohen, Alexander Y. Rudensky

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Reduced nutrient intake is a widely conserved manifestation of sickness behavior with poorly characterized effects on adaptive immune responses. During infectious challenges, naive T cells encountering their cognate antigen become activated and differentiate into highly proliferative effector T cells. Despite their evident metabolic shift upon activation, it remains unclear how effector T cells respond to changes in nutrient availability in vivo. Here, we show that spontaneous or imposed feeding reduction during infection decreases the numbers of splenic lymphocytes. Effector T cells showed cell-intrinsic responses dependent on the nuclear receptor Farnesoid X Receptor (FXR). Deletion of FXR in T cells prevented starvation-induced loss of lymphocytes and increased effector T cell fitness in nutrient-limiting conditions, but imparted greater weight loss to the host. FXR deficiency increased the contribution of glutamine and fatty acids toward respiration and enhanced cell survival under low-glucose conditions. Provision of glucose during anorexia of infection rescued effector T cells, suggesting that this sugar is a limiting nutrient for activated lymphocytes and that alternative fuel usage may affect cell survival in starved animals. Altogether, we identified a mechanism by which the host scales immune responses according to food intake, featuring FXR as a T cell-intrinsic sensor.

Topics & Concepts

EffectorAppetiteFarnesoid X receptorImmune systemAnorexiaBiologyReceptorFood intakeImmunologyImmunityPathogenCell biologyEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineNuclear receptorTranscription factorGeneGeneticsImmune Cell Function and InteractionIL-33, ST2, and ILC PathwaysT-cell and B-cell Immunology
FXR mediates T cell-intrinsic responses to reduced feeding during infection | Litcius