Publication date: 21 March 2017
Source:Immunity, Volume 46, Issue 3
Author(s): Michael I. Whang, Rita M. Tavares, Daniel I. Benjamin, Michael G. Kattah, Rommel Advincula, Daniel K. Nomura, Jayanta Debnath, Barbara A. Malynn, Averil Ma
During immune responses, naive T cells transition from small quiescent cells to rapidly cycling cells. We have found that T cells lacking TAX1BP1 exhibit delays in growth of cell size and cell cycling. TAX1BP1-deficient T cells exited G0 but stalled in S phase, due to both bioenergetic and biosynthetic defects. These defects were due to deficiencies in mTOR complex formation and activation. These mTOR defects in turn resulted from defective autophagy induction. TAX1BP1 binding of LC3 and GABARAP via its LC3-interacting region (LIR), but not its ubiquitin-binding domain, supported T cell proliferation. Supplementation of TAX1BP1-deficient T cells with metabolically active L-cysteine rescued mTOR activation and proliferation but not autophagy. These studies reveal that TAX1BP1 drives a specialized form of autophagy, providing critical amino acids that activate mTOR and enable the metabolic transition of activated T cells.
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Teaser
Naive T cells undergo major bioenergetic and biosynthetic metabolic transitions as they initiate proliferation in response to T cell activation. Whang et al. now show that the ubiqutin binding protein TAX1BP1 is critical for autophagic flux and L-cysteine-dependent activation of mTORC in newly activated T cells.http://ift.tt/2mW3EdQ
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