State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China; and.
State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241, China; and
J Immunol. 2019 Sep 1;203(5):1172-1188. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1900008. Epub 2019 Jul 26.
T cells suddenly appeared in jawed fish ∼450 million years ago. Biological studies of fish T cells may provide helpful evidence to understand evolution of adaptive immune systems. To this end, using a Nile tilapia () model, we revealed the regulatory mechanism of adaptive immunity mediated by ancestral T cells in jawed fish. Nile tilapia T cells as well as a tightly regulated mammalian/mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway participate in the cellular adaptive immune response during infection. Blockade of mTORC1 signaling by rapamycin impairs T cell activation and Ag-induced proliferation in this early vertebrate. More critically, we show that signals from mTORC1 are indispensable for primordial effector T cells to eliminate infection by promoting the expression of proinflammatory cytokines, cytotoxic-related molecules, and proapoptotic genes. Mechanistically, teleost mTORC1 directs effector T cell function by coordinating multiple metabolic programs, including glycolysis, glutaminolysis, and lipogenesis through activating key transcription factors c-Myc, HIF-1α, and sterol regulatory element-binding proteins, and thus links immune signals to metabolic reprogramming in jawed fish. To our knowledge, these results represent the first description of the regulatory mechanism for T cell-mediated adaptive immunity in a fish species. From an evolutionary viewpoint, our study suggests that primordial T cells are armed with sophisticated regulatory strategies like those in modern T cells prior to the divergence of bony fish from the tetrapod lineage. Therefore, our findings fill in an important gap regarding evolution of the adaptive immune system.
T 细胞在有颌鱼类中突然出现于约 4.5 亿年前。对鱼类 T 细胞的生物学研究可能为理解适应性免疫系统的进化提供有帮助的证据。为此,我们使用尼罗罗非鱼()模型揭示了有颌鱼类中祖先 T 细胞介导的适应性免疫的调控机制。尼罗罗非鱼 T 细胞以及受严格调控的哺乳动物/雷帕霉素靶蛋白复合物 1(mTORC1)途径参与了 感染期间的细胞适应性免疫反应。雷帕霉素阻断 mTORC1 信号会损害早期脊椎动物 T 细胞的激活和抗原诱导的增殖。更重要的是,我们表明,来自 mTORC1 的信号对于原始效应 T 细胞消除感染是必不可少的,通过促进促炎细胞因子、细胞毒性相关分子和促凋亡基因的表达来促进其功能。从机制上讲,硬骨鱼 mTORC1 通过激活关键转录因子 c-Myc、HIF-1α 和固醇调节元件结合蛋白,协调包括糖酵解、谷氨酰胺分解和脂肪生成在内的多种代谢程序,指导效应 T 细胞的功能,从而将免疫信号与有颌鱼类中的代谢重编程联系起来。据我们所知,这些结果代表了在鱼类物种中首次描述 T 细胞介导的适应性免疫的调控机制。从进化的角度来看,我们的研究表明,原始 T 细胞在硬骨鱼与四足动物谱系分化之前就已经拥有了像现代 T 细胞那样复杂的调控策略。因此,我们的发现填补了适应性免疫系统进化方面的一个重要空白。