自身免疫
医学
嘌呤
免疫学
生物
生物化学
酶
免疫系统
作者
Svetlana Saveljeva,Gavin W. Sewell,Katharina Ramshorn,M. Zaeem Cader,James A. West,Simon Clare,Lea-Maxie Haag,Rodrigo Pereira de Almeida Rodrigues,Lukas Unger,Ana Belén Iglesias-Romero,Lorraine M. Holland,Christophe Bourges,Muhammad N. Md-Ibrahim,James O. Jones,Richard S. Blumberg,James Lee,Nicole C. Kaneider,Trevor D. Lawley,Allan Bradley,Gordon Dougan,Arthur Kaser
出处
期刊:Cell Metabolism
[Elsevier]
日期:2022-01-01
卷期号:34 (1): 106-124.e10
被引量:32
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cmet.2021.12.009
摘要
Still's disease, the paradigm of autoinflammation-cum-autoimmunity, predisposes for a cytokine storm with excessive T lymphocyte activation upon viral infection. Loss of function of the purine nucleoside enzyme FAMIN is the sole known cause for monogenic Still's disease. Here we discovered that a FAMIN-enabled purine metabolon in dendritic cells (DCs) restrains CD4+ and CD8+ T cell priming. DCs with absent FAMIN activity prime for enhanced antigen-specific cytotoxicity, IFNγ secretion, and T cell expansion, resulting in excessive influenza A virus-specific responses. Enhanced priming is already manifest with hypomorphic FAMIN-I254V, for which ∼6% of mankind is homozygous. FAMIN controls membrane trafficking and restrains antigen presentation in an NADH/NAD+-dependent manner by balancing flux through adenine-guanine nucleotide interconversion cycles. FAMIN additionally converts hypoxanthine into inosine, which DCs release to dampen T cell activation. Compromised FAMIN consequently enhances immunosurveillance of syngeneic tumors. FAMIN is a biochemical checkpoint that protects against excessive antiviral T cell responses, autoimmunity, and autoinflammation.
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