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- Lymphatic endothelial S1P promotes mitochondrial function and survival in naive T cells.
Lymphatic endothelial S1P promotes mitochondrial function and survival in naive T cells.
Citation | “Lymphatic Endothelial S1P Promotes Mitochondrial Function And Survival In Naive T Cells.”. Nature, pp. 158-161. . |
Center | Albert Einstein College of Medicine |
Author | Alejandra Mendoza, Victoria Fang, Cynthia Chen, Madhavika Serasinghe, Akanksha Verma, James Muller, Sai Chaluvadi, Michael L Dustin, Timothy Hla, Olivier Elemento, Jerry E Chipuk, Susan R Schwab |
Abstract |
Effective adaptive immune responses require a large repertoire of naive T cells that migrate throughout the body, rapidly identifying almost any foreign peptide. Because the production of T cells declines with age, naive T cells must be long-lived. However, it remains unclear how naive T cells survive for years while constantly travelling. The chemoattractant sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) guides T cell circulation among secondary lymphoid organs, including spleen, lymph nodes and Peyer's patches, where T cells search for antigens. The concentration of S1P is higher in circulatory fluids than in lymphoid organs, and the S1P receptor (S1PR) directs the exit of T cells from the spleen into blood, and from lymph nodes and Peyer's patches into lymph. Here we show that S1P is essential not only for the circulation of naive T cells, but also for their survival. Using transgenic mouse models, we demonstrate that lymphatic endothelial cells support the survival of T cells by secreting S1P via the transporter SPNS2, that this S1P signals through S1PR on T cells, and that the requirement for S1PR is independent of the established role of the receptor in guiding exit from lymph nodes. S1P signalling maintains the mitochondrial content of naive T cells, providing cells with the energy to continue their constant migration. The S1P signalling pathway is being targeted therapeutically to inhibit autoreactive T cell trafficking, and these findings suggest that it may be possible simultaneously to target autoreactive or malignant cell survival. |
Year of Publication |
2017
|
Journal |
Nature
|
Volume |
546
|
Issue |
7656
|
Number of Pages |
158-161
|
Date Published |
12/2017
|
ISSN Number |
1476-4687
|
DOI |
10.1038/nature22352
|
Alternate Journal |
Nature
|
PMID |
28538737
|
PMCID |
PMC5683179
|
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