bims-mepmim Biomed News
on Metabolites in pathological microenvironments and immunometabolism
Issue of 2024–01–14
nineteen papers selected by
Erika Mariana Palmieri, NIH/NCI Laboratory of Cancer ImmunoMetabolism



  1. Redox Biol. 2024 Jan 06. pii: S2213-2317(24)00010-7. [Epub ahead of print]70 103034
      Cytokine-like protein 1 (CYTL1) expression is deliberately downregulated during the progression of multiple types of cancers, especially breast cancer. However, the metabolic characteristics of cancer progression remain unclear. Here, we uncovered a risk of breast cancer cells harboring low CYTL1 expression, which is metabolically controlled during malignant progression. We performed metabolism comparison and revealed that breast cancer cells with low CYTL1 expression have highly suppressed transsulfuration activity that is driven by cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) and contributes to de novo cysteine synthesis. Mechanistically, CYTL1 activated Nrf2 by promoting autophagic Keap1 degradation, and Nrf2 subsequently transactivated CBS expression. Due to the lack of cellular cysteine synthesis, breast cancer cells with low CYTL1 expression showed hypersensitivity to system xc- blockade-induced ferroptosis in vitro and in vivo. Silencing CBS counteracted CYTL1-mediated ferroptosis resistance. Our results show the importance of exogeneous cysteine in breast cancer cells with low CYTL1 expression and highlight a potential metabolic vulnerability to target.
    Keywords:  Breast cancer; CBS; CYTL1; Ferroptosis; Transsulfuration pathway
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2024.103034
  2. Blood Adv. 2024 Jan 09. 8(1): 56-69
       ABSTRACT: Cysteine is a nonessential amino acid required for protein synthesis, the generation of the antioxidant glutathione, and for synthesizing the nonproteinogenic amino acid taurine. Here, we highlight the broad sensitivity of leukemic stem and progenitor cells to cysteine depletion. By CRISPR/CRISPR-associated protein 9-mediated knockout of cystathionine-γ-lyase, the cystathionine-to-cysteine converting enzyme, and by metabolite supplementation studies upstream of cysteine, we functionally prove that cysteine is not synthesized from methionine in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells. Therefore, although perhaps nutritionally nonessential, cysteine must be imported for survival of these specific cell types. Depletion of cyst(e)ine increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, and cell death was induced predominantly as a consequence of glutathione deprivation. nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate hydrogen oxidase inhibition strongly rescued viability after cysteine depletion, highlighting this as an important source of ROS in AML. ROS-induced cell death was mediated via ferroptosis, and inhibition of glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), which functions in reducing lipid peroxides, was also highly toxic. We therefore propose that GPX4 is likely key in mediating the antioxidant activity of glutathione. In line, inhibition of the ROS scavenger thioredoxin reductase with auranofin also impaired cell viability, whereby we find that oxidative phosphorylation-driven AML subtypes, in particular, are highly dependent on thioredoxin-mediated protection against ferroptosis. Although inhibition of the cystine-glutamine antiporter by sulfasalazine was ineffective as a monotherapy, its combination with L-buthionine-sulfoximine (BSO) further improved AML ferroptosis induction. We propose the combination of either sulfasalazine or antioxidant machinery inhibitors along with ROS inducers such as BSO or chemotherapy for further preclinical testing.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010786
  3. Nat Commun. 2024 Jan 11. 15(1): 451
      Immune cells must adapt to different environments during the course of an immune response. Here we study the adaptation of CD8+ T cells to the intestinal microenvironment and how this process shapes the establishment of the CD8+ T cell pool. CD8+ T cells progressively remodel their transcriptome and surface phenotype as they enter the gut wall, and downregulate expression of mitochondrial genes. Human and mouse intestinal CD8+ T cells have reduced mitochondrial mass, but maintain a viable energy balance to sustain their function. We find that the intestinal microenvironment is rich in prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), which drives mitochondrial depolarization in CD8+ T cells. Consequently, these cells engage autophagy to clear depolarized mitochondria, and enhance glutathione synthesis to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) that result from mitochondrial depolarization. Impairing PGE2 sensing promotes CD8+ T cell accumulation in the gut, while tampering with autophagy and glutathione negatively impacts the T cell pool. Thus, a PGE2-autophagy-glutathione axis defines the metabolic adaptation of CD8+ T cells to the intestinal microenvironment, to ultimately influence the T cell pool.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44689-2
  4. EMBO J. 2024 Jan 11.
      Impaired autophagy is known to cause mitochondrial dysfunction and heart failure, in part due to altered mitophagy and protein quality control. However, whether additional mechanisms are involved in the development of mitochondrial dysfunction and heart failure in the setting of deficient autophagic flux remains poorly explored. Here, we show that impaired autophagic flux reduces nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) availability in cardiomyocytes. NAD+ deficiency upon autophagic impairment is attributable to the induction of nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), which methylates the NAD+ precursor nicotinamide (NAM) to generate N-methyl-nicotinamide (MeNAM). The administration of nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) or inhibition of NNMT activity in autophagy-deficient hearts and cardiomyocytes restores NAD+ levels and ameliorates cardiac and mitochondrial dysfunction. Mechanistically, autophagic inhibition causes the accumulation of SQSTM1, which activates NF-κB signaling and promotes NNMT transcription. In summary, we describe a novel mechanism illustrating how autophagic flux maintains mitochondrial and cardiac function by mediating SQSTM1-NF-κB-NNMT signaling and controlling the cellular levels of NAD+.
    Keywords:  Autophagic Flux; Heart Dysfunction; Mitochondrial Homeostasis; NAD+ Metabolism
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s44318-023-00009-w
  5. Nat Metab. 2024 Jan 10.
      Bone-resorbing osteoclasts are vital for postnatal bone health, as increased differentiation or activity results in skeletal pathologies such as osteoporosis. The metabolism of mature osteoclasts differs from their progenitor cells, but whether the observed metabolic changes are secondary to the altered cell state or actively drive the process of cell differentiation is unknown. Here, we show that transient activation of the serine synthesis pathway (SSP) is essential for osteoclastogenesis, as deletion of the rate-limiting enzyme phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase in osteoclast progenitors impairs their differentiation and results in increased bone mass. In addition, pharmacological phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase inhibition abrogated bone loss in a mouse model of postmenopausal osteoporosis by blocking bone resorption. Mechanistically, SSP-derived α-ketoglutarate is necessary for histone demethylases that remove repressive histone methylation marks at the nuclear factor of activated T cells, cytoplasmic 1 (Nfatc1) gene locus, thereby inducing NFATc1 expression and consequent osteoclast maturation. Taken together, this study reveals a metabolic-epigenetic coupling mechanism that directs osteoclast differentiation and suggests that the SSP can be therapeutically targeted to prevent osteoporotic bone loss.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-023-00948-y
  6. Redox Biol. 2024 Jan 03. pii: S2213-2317(23)00419-6. [Epub ahead of print]69 103018
      Supersulfides, which are defined as sulfur species with catenated sulfur atoms, are increasingly being investigated in biology. We recently identified pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent biosynthesis of cysteine persulfide (CysSSH) and related supersulfides by cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase (CARS). Here, we investigated the physiological role of CysSSH in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) by generating a PLP-binding site mutation K109A in CRS1 (the yeast ortholog of CARS), which decreased the synthesis of CysSSH and related supersulfides and also led to reduced chronological aging, effects that were associated with an increased endoplasmic reticulum stress response and impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics. Reduced chronological aging in the K109A mutant could be rescued by using exogenous supersulfide donors. Our findings indicate important roles for CARS in the production and metabolism of supersulfides-to mediate mitochondrial function and to regulate longevity.
    Keywords:  Cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase; ER stress; Longevity; Mitochondrial energy metabolism; Supersulfides
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2023.103018
  7. Nat Methods. 2024 Jan 08.
      It is poorly understood how different cells in a tissue organize themselves to support tissue functions. We describe the CytoCommunity algorithm for the identification of tissue cellular neighborhoods (TCNs) based on cell phenotypes and their spatial distributions. CytoCommunity learns a mapping directly from the cell phenotype space to the TCN space using a graph neural network model without intermediate clustering of cell embeddings. By leveraging graph pooling, CytoCommunity enables de novo identification of condition-specific and predictive TCNs under the supervision of sample labels. Using several types of spatial omics data, we demonstrate that CytoCommunity can identify TCNs of variable sizes with substantial improvement over existing methods. By analyzing risk-stratified colorectal and breast cancer data, CytoCommunity revealed new granulocyte-enriched and cancer-associated fibroblast-enriched TCNs specific to high-risk tumors and altered interactions between neoplastic and immune or stromal cells within and between TCNs. CytoCommunity can perform unsupervised and supervised analyses of spatial omics maps and enable the discovery of condition-specific cell-cell communication patterns across spatial scales.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-023-02124-2
  8. Immunity. 2024 Jan 09. pii: S1074-7613(23)00539-3. [Epub ahead of print]57(1): 3-5
      Tissue-resident macrophages are essential for maintaining organismal homeostasis, but the precise mechanisms that macrophages use to perform this function are not fully understood. In this issue of Immunity, He et al. demonstrate that renal macrophages surveil and sample urine particles, ensuring optimal collecting duct flow and preventing kidney stone development.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2023.12.008
  9. Sci Rep. 2024 Jan 12. 14(1): 1193
      High rates of cardiac fatty acid oxidation during reperfusion of ischemic hearts contribute to contractile dysfunction. This study aimed to investigate whether lysine acetylation affects fatty acid oxidation rates and recovery in post-ischemic hearts. Isolated working hearts from Sprague Dawley rats were perfused with 1.2 mM palmitate and 5 mM glucose and subjected to 30 min of ischemia and 40 min of reperfusion. Cardiac function, fatty acid oxidation, glucose oxidation, and glycolysis rates were compared between pre- and post-ischemic hearts. The acetylation status of enzymes involved in cardiac energy metabolism was assessed in both groups. Reperfusion after ischemia resulted in only a 41% recovery of cardiac work. Fatty acid oxidation and glycolysis rates increased while glucose oxidation rates decreased. The contribution of fatty acid oxidation to ATP production and TCA cycle activity increased from 90 to 93% and from 94.9 to 98.3%, respectively, in post-ischemic hearts. However, the overall acetylation status and acetylation levels of metabolic enzymes did not change in response to ischemia and reperfusion. These findings suggest that acetylation may not contribute to the high rates of fatty acid oxidation and reduced glucose oxidation observed in post-ischemic hearts perfused with high levels of palmitate substrate.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-51571-0
  10. Cardiovasc Res. 2024 Jan 09. pii: cvae006. [Epub ahead of print]
       AIMS: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is a prevalent disease worldwide. While it is well established that alterations of cardiac energy metabolism contribute to cardiovascular pathology, the precise source of fuel used by the heart in HFpEF remain unclear.The objective of this study was to define the energy metabolic profile of the heart in HFpEF.
    METHODS AND RESULTS: 8-week-old C57BL/6 male mice were subjected to a '2-Hit' HFpEF protocol (60% high-fat diet (HFD) + 0.5 g/L of Nω-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME)). Echocardiography and pressure-volume loop analysis were used for assessing cardiac function and cardiac hemodynamics respectively. Isolated working hearts were perfused with radiolabeled energy substrates to directly measure rates of fatty acid oxidation, glucose oxidation, ketone oxidation, and glycolysis.HFpEF mice exhibited increased body weight, glucose intolerance, elevated blood pressure, diastolic dysfunction, and cardiac hypertrophy. In HFpEF hearts, insulin stimulation of glucose oxidation was significantly suppressed. This is paralleled with an increase in fatty acid oxidation rates, while cardiac ketone oxidation and glycolysis rates were comparable to healthy control hearts. The balance between glucose and fatty acid oxidation contributing to overall adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production was disrupted, where HFpEF hearts were more reliant on fatty acid as the major source of fuel for ATP production, compensating for the decrease of ATP originating from glucose oxidation. Additionally, p-PDH (pyruvate dehydrogenase) levels decreased in both HFpEF mice and human patients heart samples.
    CONCLUSIONS: In HFpEF, fatty acid oxidation dominates as the major source of cardiac ATP production at the expense of insulin stimulated glucose oxidation.
    Keywords:  cardiac energy metabolism; fatty acid oxidation; glucose oxidation; glycolysis; ketone oxidation
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvae006
  11. Immunity. 2024 Jan 09. pii: S1074-7613(23)00540-X. [Epub ahead of print]57(1): 14-27
      Nutrition profoundly shapes immunity and inflammation across the lifespan of mammals, from pre- and post-natal periods to later life. Emerging insights into diet-microbiota interactions indicate that nutrition has a dominant influence on the composition-and metabolic output-of the intestinal microbiota, which in turn has major consequences for host immunity and inflammation. Here, we discuss recent findings that support the concept that dietary effects on microbiota-derived metabolites potently alter immune responses in health and disease. We discuss how specific dietary components and metabolites can be either pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory in a context- and tissue-dependent manner during infection, chronic inflammation, and cancer. Together, these studies emphasize the influence of diet-microbiota crosstalk on immune regulation that will have a significant impact on precision nutrition approaches and therapeutic interventions for managing inflammation, infection, and cancer immunotherapy.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2023.12.009
  12. EMBO J. 2024 Jan 08.
      Metabolic syndrome combines major risk factors for cardiovascular disease, making deeper insight into its pathogenesis important. We here explore the mechanistic basis of metabolic syndrome by recruiting an essential patient cohort and performing extensive gene expression profiling. The mitochondrial fatty acid metabolism enzyme acyl-CoA synthetase medium-chain family member 3 (ACSM3) was identified to be significantly lower expressed in the peripheral blood of metabolic syndrome patients. In line, hepatic ACSM3 expression was decreased in mice with metabolic syndrome. Furthermore, Acsm3 knockout mice showed glucose and lipid metabolic abnormalities, and hepatic accumulation of the ACSM3 fatty acid substrate lauric acid. Acsm3 depletion markedly decreased mitochondrial function and stimulated signaling via the p38 MAPK pathway cascade. Consistently, Acsm3 knockout mouse exhibited abnormal mitochondrial morphology, decreased ATP contents, and enhanced ROS levels in their livers. Mechanistically, Acsm3 deficiency, and lauric acid accumulation activated nuclear receptor Hnf4α-p38 MAPK signaling. In line, the p38 inhibitor Adezmapimod effectively rescued the Acsm3 depletion phenotype. Together, these findings show that disease-associated loss of ACSM3 facilitates mitochondrial dysfunction via a lauric acid-HNF4a-p38 MAPK axis, suggesting a novel therapeutic vulnerability in systemic metabolic dysfunction.
    Keywords:  Acsm3; Lauric Acid; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria Dysfunction; p38 MAPK Signaling Pathway
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1038/s44318-023-00020-1
  13. J Leukoc Biol. 2024 Jan 11. pii: qiae006. [Epub ahead of print]
      Generally, fasting and refeeding confer anti- and pro-inflammatory effects, respectively. In humans, these caloric-load interventions function, in part, via regulation of CD4+ T cell biology. However, mechanisms orchestrating this regulation remain incomplete. We employed integrative bioinformatics of RNA-seq and HPLC-mass spectrometry data to measure serum metabolites and gene expression of peripheral blood mononuclear cells isolated from fasting and refeeding in volunteers to identify nutrient-load metabolite-driven immunoregulation. Propionate, a short chain fatty acid (SCFA), and the SCFA-sensing G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) 43 (ffar2) were co-ordinately and inversely regulated by fasting and refeeding. Propionate and FFAR agonists decreased IFNγ and IL-17 and significantly blunted HDAC activity in CD4+ T cells. Furthermore, propionate blunted NFκB activity and diminished IL-6 release. In parallel, propionate reduced phosphorylation of canonical TH1 and TH17 regulators, STAT1 and STAT3, respectively. Conversely, knockdown of FFARs significantly attenuated the anti-inflammatory role of propionate. Interestingly, propionate recapitulated the blunting of CD4+ T helper cell activation in primary cells from obese individuals, extending the role of this metabolite to a disease associated with low-grade inflammation. Together, these data identify a nutrient-load responsive SCFA-GPCR linked pathway to regulate CD4+ helper T cell immune responsiveness.
    Keywords:  CD4+ T cells; FFAR2; Fasting; IL-6; Metabolite; NFκB; Propionate
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/jleuko/qiae006
  14. JCI Insight. 2024 Jan 09. pii: e168517. [Epub ahead of print]9(1):
      Metastatic breast cancer (mBC) tissue in bone was systematically profiled to define the composition of the tumor microenvironment. Gene expression identified a high myeloid signature of patients with improved survival outcomes. Bone metastases were profiled by spatial proteomics to examine myeloid populations within the stroma that correlated with macrophage functions. Single-cell spatial analysis uncovered macrophage activation in the stroma of mBC bone lesions. Matched BC patient samples of primary breast tumor and bone metastasis tissues were compared for gene expression in the bone, where bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) was most significantly upregulated. Immune cell changes from breast to bone demonstrated a loss of lymphoid cells but a consistent population of macrophages. BMP-activated macrophages were increased uniquely in bone. Bone marrow-derived macrophage activation coupled with BMP inhibition increased inflammatory responses. Using experimental mouse models of mBC bone metastasis and trained immunity, we found that BMP inhibition restricts progression of metastases early in the macrophage activation state but not after tumors were established in the bone. This study revealed unique myeloid BMP activation states that are distinctly integrated with bone metastases.
    Keywords:  Breast cancer; Immunology; Innate immunity; Oncology
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.168517
  15. J Biol Chem. 2024 Jan 08. pii: S0021-9258(24)00002-4. [Epub ahead of print] 105626
      Mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) complexes organize into supramolecular structures called respiratory supercomplexes (SCs). The role of respiratory SC remains largely unconfirmed despite evidence supporting their necessity for mitochondrial respiratory function. The mechanisms underlying the formation of the I1III2IV1 "respirasome" SC are also not fully understood, further limiting insights into these processes in physiology and diseases, including neurodegeneration and metabolic syndromes. NDUFB4 is a complex I accessory subunit that contains residues that interact with the subunit UQCRC1 from complex III, suggesting that NDUFB4 is integral for I1III2IV1 respirasome integrity. Here, we introduced specific point mutations to Asn24 (N24) and Arg30 (R30) residues on NDUFB4 to decipher the role of I1III2-containing respiratory SCs in cellular metabolism while minimizing the functional consequences to complex I assembly. Our results demonstrate that NDUFB4 point mutations N24A and R30A impair I1III2IV1 respirasome assembly and reduce mitochondrial respiratory flux. Steady-state metabolomics also revealed a global decrease in TCA cycle metabolites, affecting NADH-generating substrates. Taken together, our findings highlight an integral role of NDUFB4 in respirasome assembly and demonstrate the functional significance of SCs in regulating mammalian cell bioenergetics.
    Keywords:  Mitochondria; NDUFB4; electron transport chain; oxidative phosphorylation; respirasome; steady-state metabolomics; supercomplexes
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2024.105626
  16. Mol Cell. 2024 Jan 04. pii: S1097-2765(23)01035-3. [Epub ahead of print]
      Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is a debilitating, multisystemic disease caused by the depletion of frataxin (FXN), a mitochondrial iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster biogenesis factor. To understand the cellular pathogenesis of FA, we performed quantitative proteomics in FXN-deficient human cells. Nearly every annotated Fe-S cluster-containing protein was depleted, indicating that as a rule, cluster binding confers stability to Fe-S proteins. We also observed depletion of a small mitoribosomal assembly factor METTL17 and evidence of impaired mitochondrial translation. Using comparative sequence analysis, mutagenesis, biochemistry, and cryoelectron microscopy, we show that METTL17 binds to the mitoribosomal small subunit during late assembly and harbors a previously unrecognized [Fe4S4]2+ cluster required for its stability. METTL17 overexpression rescued the mitochondrial translation and bioenergetic defects, but not the cellular growth, of FXN-depleted cells. These findings suggest that METTL17 acts as an Fe-S cluster checkpoint, promoting translation of Fe-S cluster-rich oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) proteins only when Fe-S cofactors are replete.
    Keywords:  FA; Fe-S cluster; Friedreich’s ataxia; METTL17; frataxin; mitochondria; mitoribosome
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2023.12.016
  17. Cancer Cell. 2024 Jan 08. pii: S1535-6108(23)00438-5. [Epub ahead of print]42(1): 157-167.e9
      Cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) influence each other through secretion and sensing of soluble mediators, such as cytokines and chemokines. While signaling of interferon γ (IFNγ) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) is integral to anti-tumor immune responses, our understanding of the spatiotemporal behavior of these cytokines is limited. Here, we describe a single cell transcriptome-based approach to infer which signal(s) an individual cell has received. We demonstrate that, contrary to expectations, CD8+ T cell-derived IFNγ is the dominant modifier of the TME relative to TNFα. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cell pools that show abundant IFNγ sensing are characterized by decreased expression of transforming growth factor β (TGFβ)-induced genes, consistent with IFNγ-mediated TME remodeling. Collectively, these data provide evidence that CD8+ T cell-secreted cytokines should be categorized into local and global tissue modifiers, and describe a broadly applicable approach to dissect cytokine and chemokine modulation of the TME.
    Keywords:  IFN-gamma; T cell; TNF-alpha; cytokine; single cell RNA-seq; tumor microenvironment
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccell.2023.12.010
  18. J Lipid Res. 2024 Jan 05. pii: S0022-2275(24)00001-4. [Epub ahead of print] 100496
      Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) is a life-threatening, rare lung syndrome for which there is no cure and no approved therapies. PAP is a disease of lipid accumulation characterized by alveolar macrophage foam cell formation. While much is known about the clinical presentation, there is a paucity of information regarding temporal changes in lipids throughout the course of disease. Our objectives were to define the detailed lipid composition of alveolar macrophages in PAP patients at the time of diagnosis and during treatment. We performed comprehensive mass spectrometry to profile the lipid signature of alveolar macrophages obtained from three independent mouse models of PAP and from PAP and nonPAP patients. Additionally, we quantified changes in macrophage-associated lipids during clinical treatment of PAP patients. We found remarkable variations in lipid composition in PAP patients, which were consistent with data from three independent mouse models. Detailed lipidomic analysis revealed that the overall alveolar macrophage lipid burden inversely correlated with clinical improvement and response to therapy in PAP patients. Specifically, as PAP patients experienced clinical improvement, there was a notable decrease in the total lipid content of alveolar macrophages. This crucial observation suggests that the levels of these macrophage-associated lipids can be utilized to assess the efficacy of treatment. These findings provide valuable insights into the dysregulated lipid metabolism associated with PAP, offering the potential for lipid profiling to serve as a means of monitoring therapeutic interventions in PAP patients.
    Keywords:  Cholesterol; Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis; alveolar macrophages; foam cells; lipidomics; lipids; phospholipids; pulmonary surfactant
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlr.2024.100496
  19. J Exp Med. 2024 Feb 05. pii: e20230326. [Epub ahead of print]221(2):
      The central nervous system (CNS) tightly regulates access of circulating immune cells. Immunosurveillance is therefore managed in the meninges at the borders of the CNS. Here, we demonstrated that mural cells, which include pericytes and smooth muscle cells, decreased coverage around blood vessels in the dura, the outermost layer of the meninges, and upregulated gene pathways involved in leukocyte migration in presymptomatic experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Partially depleting mural cells promoted the trafficking of CNS antigen-specific T cells to the dura in a process that depended on resident antigen-presenting cells, thereby increasing susceptibility to passive EAE. Mechanistically, mural cells physically contacted macrophages in the dura and transferred cytoplasmic components, including processing bodies (RNA granules shown to reprogram transcriptomes), which were critical to suppress antigen-dependent T helper (TH) cell activation and TH17 differentiation. Our study revealed a mechanism by which mural cell-macrophage interactions regulate the trafficking of CNS antigen-specific T cells to the dura.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20230326