作者
Irem Kaymak,McLane J. Watson,Brandon M. Oswald,Shixin Ma,Benjamin K. Johnson,Lisa M. DeCamp,Batsirai Mabvakure,Katarzyna M. Luda,H. Eric,Kin H. Lau,Zhen Fu,Brejnev Muhire,Susan M. Kitchen-Goosen,Alexandra Vander Ark,Michael S. Dahabieh,Bożena Samborska,Matthew Vos,Hui Shen,Zi Peng Fan,Thomas P. Roddy,Gillian A. Kingsbury,Cristovão M. Sousa,Connie M. Krawczyk,Kelsey S. Williams,Ryan D. Sheldon,Susan M. Kaech,Dominic G. Roy,Russell G. Jones
摘要
Coordination of cellular metabolism is essential for optimal T cell responses. Here, we identify cytosolic acetyl-CoA production as an essential metabolic node for CD8 T cell function in vivo. We show that CD8 T cell responses to infection depend on acetyl-CoA derived from citrate via the enzyme ATP citrate lyase (ACLY). However, ablation of ACLY triggers an alternative, acetate-dependent pathway for acetyl-CoA production mediated by acyl-CoA synthetase short-chain family member 2 (ACSS2). Mechanistically, acetate fuels both the TCA cycle and cytosolic acetyl-CoA production, impacting T cell effector responses, acetate-dependent histone acetylation, and chromatin accessibility at effector gene loci. When ACLY is functional, ACSS2 is not required, suggesting acetate is not an obligate metabolic substrate for CD8 T cell function. However, loss of ACLY renders CD8 T cells dependent on acetate (via ACSS2) to maintain acetyl-CoA production and effector function. Together, ACLY and ACSS2 coordinate cytosolic acetyl-CoA production in CD8 T cells to maintain chromatin accessibility and T cell effector function.