(Press-News.org) LA JOLLA (December 12, 2024)—The decision between scrambled eggs or an apple for breakfast probably won’t make or break your day. However, for your cells, a decision between similar microscopic nutrients could determine their entire identity. If and how nutrient preference impacts cell identity has been a longstanding mystery for scientists—until a team of Salk Institute immunologists revealed a novel framework for the complicated relationship between nutrition and cell identity.
The answers came while the researchers were exploring different kinds of immune cells. The immune system relies on specialized “effector” T cells to fight off pathogens, but in chronic infections like HIV or cancers, the perpetual activation of these cells can turn them into “exhausted” T cells unable to continue fighting. In the new study, Salk scientists discovered that a nutritional switch from acetate to citrate plays a key role in determining T cell fates, shifting them from active effector cells to exhausted cells. This finding highlights how metabolic changes influence T cell identity and open avenues for interventions to sustain immune function.
The discovery that different nutrients can change a cell’s gene expression, function, and identity significantly advances scientists’ understanding of the relationship between nutrition and cellular health throughout the body. It may also be possible to develop new therapies that target these nutrient-dependent mechanisms to help T cells stay active and energetically optimized against chronic diseases like cancer or HIV.
The findings were published in Science on December 12, 2024.
“You know the saying, ‘You are what you eat?’ Well, we uncovered a way in which this actually operates in cells,” says Professor Susan Kaech, senior author of the study and holder of the NOMIS Chair at Salk. “This is really exciting on two levels: on a fundamental level, our findings show that a cell’s function can be directly linked to its nutrition; on a more specific level, this sheds new light on how T cells become dysfunctional or exhausted and what we could do to prevent that.”
Metabolism is a central cellular process that processes nutrients into metabolites and energy. Nutrients provide the resources for all cellular activities, but they must first be broken down into smaller molecules called metabolites. Metabolites have many uses, including promoting epigenetic regulation, a process that changes the shape of a cell’s DNA to alter the accessibility of different genes. Which genes are expressed in a cell at any given time then determines the behavior and identity of the entire cell.
The team wondered: Could this change in metabolism be responsible for the epigenetic changes that turn effector T cells into exhausted T cells? Is there a link between nutrition and exhausted T cell differentiation?
One of the most important and common metabolites is acetyl-CoA, which both effector and exhausted T cells make—but with one interesting difference. Exhausted T cells tend to make their acetyl-CoA using a protein called ACLY that uses citrate, rather than using a protein called ACSS2 that uses acetate.
The preferential activity of citrate-using-ACLY in exhausted T cells and acetate-using-ACSS2 in effector T cells piqued the team’s curiosity, leading them to genetically investigate the production of these metabolic proteins in both T cell subtypes. They found that ACSS2 gene expression was most highly expressed in functional T cells, but was drastically reduced in exhausted T cells in both mouse and human tissue samples. In contrast, ACLY genes were expressed similarly in both effector and exhausted T cells—with slightly greater expression in the exhausted cells. This suggested that T cells needed to express ACSS2 to maintain a functional state and that with exhaustion comes a greater reliance on ACLY.
To verify their findings, they went into the T cells and deleted ACLY and ACSS2 genes one at a time—discovering that the loss of ACLY boosted anti-tumor T cell activity, while the loss of ACSS2 did the opposite and reduced T cell efficacy. Seeing these differences in expression of ACLY and ACSS2 then led to a line of questioning about whether the downstream acetyl-CoA derived from these proteins may be determining the formation of exhausted T cells.
“We were shocked and thrilled to find the types of nutrients our cells were using changed their genetic expression and identities, meaning we have a whole new nutrient-dependent process to target with therapeutics that better equip us to fight chronic illness,” says Shixin Ma, first author of the study and postdoctoral researcher in Kaech’s lab.
Exhausted T cells were bailing on ACSS2 and relying heavily on ACLY, forcing themselves to use more citrate and less acetate to create acetyl-CoA, despite equal availability of both nutrients. Upon closer inspection, the researchers noticed that two distinct pools of otherwise identical acetyl-CoA were piling up in different locations in the nucleus—where the cell’s DNA is stored—based on whether it was derived from acetate via ACSS2 or from citrate via ACLY. Each nutrient-specific pile was then linked to unique histone acetyltransferases, which are proteins that reshape DNA and influence which genes are expressed to change cellular behavior and identity.
In a sort of domino effect, the original nutrient was ultimately determining T cell fate—(1) the metabolic enzyme (ACSS2 or ACLY) determined the nutrient used, (2) the metabolic enzyme determined the location of acetyl-CoA, (3) the location of acetyl-CoA determined what gene-modifying histone acetyltransferases were activated, and (4) those histone acetyltransferases either maintained the effector T cell identity or encouraged the shift to exhausted T cell identity.
This novel link between nutrition and cell identity offers a new explanation for exhausted T cell identity and in turn offers a multitude of new targets for future therapeutics that could keep T cells turned “on” longer.
“Truly, this is a radical concept that hasn’t been seen before,” says Kaech. “We are seeing clear consequences in cellular identity and function based on nutrient preferences by cells. The impact of these findings won’t just be within immunotherapy and immunology—every cell type in the body uses these metabolic processes, so plenty of other discoveries and therapeutic innovations can come out of what we’ve found."
Other authors include Thomas Mann, Steven Zhao, Bryan McDonald, Yagmur Farsakoglu, Lizmarie Garcia-Rivera, Filipe Araujo Hoffmann, Shihao Xu, Victor Du, Dan Chen, Jesse Furgiuele, Michael LaPorta, and Emily Jacobs of Salk; Michael Dahabieh, Lisa DeCamp, Brandon Oswald, Ryan Sheldon, Abigail Ellis, and Russell Jones of the Van Andel Institute; Won-Suk Song and Cholsoon Jang of UC Irvine; H. Kay Chung of Salk and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Longwei Liu and Yingxiao Wang of the University of Southern California; and Peixiang He of UC San Diego.
The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (R01 AI066232, R21 AI151986, R01 AI165722, R01 AA029124, EB R01 029122, GM R35 140929, K00CA222741, P30 CA01495, S10-OD023689, S10 OD034268, P30 AG068635, T32CA009370), Chapman Foundation and the Helmsley Charitable Trust, Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, Van Andel Institute, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases Foundation, Edward Mallinckrodt Jr. Foundation, Cancer Research Institute, Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation, and a Salk Pioneer Fund Postdoctoral Scholar Award.
About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies:
Unlocking the secrets of life itself is the driving force behind the Salk Institute. Our team of world-class, award-winning scientists pushes the boundaries of knowledge in areas such as neuroscience, cancer research, aging, immunobiology, plant biology, computational biology, and more. Founded by Jonas Salk, developer of the first safe and effective polio vaccine, the Institute is an independent, nonprofit research organization and architectural landmark: small by choice, intimate by nature, and fearless in the face of any challenge. Learn more at www.salk.edu.
END
Your immune cells are what they eat
Salk scientists establish novel link between cell nutrition and identity, say targeting nutrient-dependent activity could improve immunotherapies
2024-12-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Oldest modern human genomes sequenced
2024-12-12
After modern humans left Africa, they met and interbred with Neandertals, resulting in around two to three percent Neandertal DNA that can be found in the genomes of all people outside Africa today. However, little is known about the genetics of these first pioneers in Europe and the timing of the Neandertal admixture with non-Africans.
A key site in Europe is Zlatý kůň in Czechia, where a complete skull from a single individual who lived around 45,000 years ago was discovered and previously ...
Diverse virus populations coexist on single strains of gut bacteria
2024-12-12
Viruses that infect and kill bacteria, called phages, hold promise as new treatment types for dangerous infections, including strains that have become resistant to antibiotics. Yet, virologists know little about how phages persist in the populations of bacterial cells they infect, hampering the development of phage therapies.
Published online December 13 in the journal Science, a new study offers the first evidence that a single bacterial species, the host of a phage, can maintain a diverse community of competing phage species. Led by researchers at NYU Grossman ...
Surveys show full scale of massive die-off of common murres following the ‘warm blob’ in the Pacific Ocean
2024-12-12
Murres, a common seabird, look a little like flying penguins. These stout, tuxedo-styled birds dive and swim in the ocean to eat small fish and then fly back to islands or coastal cliffs where they nest in large colonies. But their hardy physiques disguise how vulnerable these birds are to changing ocean conditions.
A University of Washington citizen science program — which trains coastal residents to search local beaches and document dead birds — has contributed to a new study, led by federal scientists, documenting the devastating effect of warming waters on common murres in Alaska.
In 2020, participants of the UW-led Coastal ...
Floods, insufficient water, sinking river deltas: hydrologists map changing river landscapes across the globe
2024-12-12
AMHERST, Mass. — A new study in Science by researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and University of Cincinnati has mapped 35 years of river changes on a global scale for the first time. The work has revealed that 44% of the largest, downstream rivers saw a decrease in how much water flows through them every year, while 17% of the smallest upstream rivers saw increases. These changes have implications for flooding, ecosystem disruption, hydropower development interference and insufficient freshwater supplies.
Previous attempts to quantify ...
Model enables study of age-specific responses to COVID mRNA vaccines in a dish
2024-12-12
mRNA vaccines clearly saved lives during the COVID-19 pandemic, but several studies suggest that older people had a somewhat reduced immune response to the vaccines when compared with younger adults. Why? Researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital, led by Byron Brook, PhD, David Dowling, PhD, and Ofer Levy, MD, PhD, found some answers — while providing proof-of-concept of a new system that can model mRNA vaccine responses in a dish. This, in turn, could help expedite efforts to make ...
New grant to UMD School of Public Health will uncover “ghost networks” in Medicare plans
2024-12-12
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Dr. Mika Hamer is about to go ghost hunting. Thanks to a $100K grant from the Robert Johnson Wood Foundation (RWJF), the University of Maryland School of Public Health researcher aims to uncover the extent of so-called “ghost networks” in Medicare Advantage health insurance plans.
A “ghost network” describes the difference between advertised in-network healthcare providers for a given insurance plan and the providers who are in fact available to deliver care to patients enrolled in those plans – meaning a patient ...
Researchers describe a potential target to address a severe heart disease in diabetic patients
2024-12-12
Some patients with diabetes develop a serious condition known as diabetic cardiomyopathy, which is slow and cannot be directly attributed to hypertension or other cardiovascular disorders. This often under-diagnosed heart function impairment is one of the leading causes of death in diabetic patients and it affects both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. There is no current specific drug treatment or clinical protocol approved to address this disease.
A study published in the journal Pharmacological Research describes a potential target that could spur the ...
U-M study of COVID-19 deaths challenges claims, understanding of pandemic-era suicides
2024-12-12
In what is believed to be the first study of its kind, University of Michigan researchers dug deeper into the numbers-only data of COVID-19-era suicides and evaluated the narratives contained in reports from coroners, medical examiners, police and vital statistics.
The researchers sought to understand how the crisis influenced suicide deaths in the first year of the pandemic, how the response by governments, employers and others influenced individuals, and if their handling could inform future public health responses.
"Our study adds much-needed context and meaning to the data that have assumed the deaths are ...
How the dirt under our feet could affect human health
2024-12-12
Soil plays a much bigger role in the spread of antibiotic resistance than one might imagine.
Surprisingly, the ground beneath us is packed with antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) — tiny codes that allow bacteria to resist antibiotics. Human activities, such as pollution and changing land use, can disturb soil ecosystems and make it easier for resistance genes to transfer from soil bacteria and infect humans.
Jingqiu Liao, assistant professor in civil and environmental engineering, is on a mission to understand how soil bacteria contribute to ...
Screen time is a poor predictor of suicide risk, Rutgers researchers find
2024-12-12
For parents trying to shield their children from online threats, limiting screen time is a common tactic. Less time scrolling, the rationale goes, means less exposure to the psychological dangers posed by social media.
But research from Rutgers University-New Brunswick upends this assumption. Writing in The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, Jessica L. Hamilton, an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the School of Arts and Sciences, reports that screen time ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Magnetic catalysts enhance tumor treatment via electronic density regulation
Quantum dot discovery for LEDs brings brighter, more eco-friendly displays
Phosphorus doping stabilizes high-energy polymeric nitrogen at ambient pressure
Maternal cannabis use triples risk of disruptive behaviour in children
Balancing Nutrition: Micronutrient study could help prevent childhood obesity in Pacific region
Lightening the load of augmented reality glasses
Sneaky clocks: uncovering Einstein’s relativity in an interacting atomic playground
The chances of anything coming from Mars
Scientists unlock clues to new treatments for muscular dystrophy
Anti-obesity drugs benefit kidney transplant recipients with type 2 diabetes
Cases of Parkinson’s disease set to reach 25 million worldwide by 2050
Throat microbiome holds clues to older Australians’ health
Diabetes drug could help cancer patients make better recovery
Seismic study of Singapore could guide urban construction and renewable energy development
Tufts scientists develop open-source software for modeling soft materials
Repurposed ALS drug becomes imaging probe to help diagnose neurodegeneration
AI can open up beds in the ICU
Are robotic hernia repairs still in the “learning curve” phase?
New STI impacts 1 in 3 women: Landmark study reveals men are the missing link
Feeling is believing: Bionic hand “knows” what it’s touching, grasps like a human
Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation awards $4.4 million to top young scientists
Over-the-counter pain relievers linked to improved recovery from concussion
Stressed out? It may increase the risk of stroke
Nanoscale tweaks help alloy withstand high-speed impacts
AI-generated voices which sound like you are perceived as more trustworthy and likeable, with implications for deep-fakes and manipulation
The cacao tree species (Theobroma cacao L.), from which we get chocolate, is likely about 7.5 million years old, with chloroplast genomes indicating that the current known diversity diversified during
After sexual misconduct accusations, scholars’ work is cited less
Menopause symptoms associated with future memory and neuropsychiatric problems
Findings may advance understanding of infertility in mothers
Engineered cartilage from nasal septum cells helps treat complex knee injuries
[Press-News.org] Your immune cells are what they eatSalk scientists establish novel link between cell nutrition and identity, say targeting nutrient-dependent activity could improve immunotherapies