Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Department of Internal Medicine and Medical Specialties, Sapienza Università di Roma, Rome, Italy.
Laboratory Affiliated to Istituto Pasteur Italia - Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti, Rome, Italy.
Front Immunol. 2019 Aug 27;10:1889. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01889. eCollection 2019.
In the last decades, immunologists have started to consider intracellular metabolism in relation with the dynamics and functions of immune cells, especially when it became clear that microenvironmental alterations were associated with immune dysfunctions. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are equipped with a variety of immunological and metabolic sensors, and encompass circulating as well as tissue-resident cells, being therefore particularly susceptible to microenvironmental cues. Moreover, Tregs undergo metabolic reprogramming over the course of an immune response, allowing the use of alternate substrates and engaging different metabolic pathways for energetic demands. The study of metabolic mechanisms supporting Treg dynamics has led to puzzling results, due to several limitations, including the heterogeneity of population in the same tissues and between different tissues, the difficulty in considering all the interconnected metabolic pathways during a cellular process, and the differences between and conditions. Therefore, Treg reliance on different metabolic routes (oxidation rather than glycolysis) has been a matter of controversy in recent years. Metabolic reprogramming and altered bioenergetics are now identified as hallmarks in cancer, and are employed by cancer cells to determine the availability of metabolites and molecules, thus affecting the fate of tumor-infiltrating immune cells. In particular, the tumor microenvironment forces a metabolic restriction and a plethora of synergistic intrinsic and extrinsic stresses, leading to an impaired anti-tumor immunity and favoring Treg generation, expansion, and suppressive function. This leads to the understanding that Tregs and conventional T cells have different capability to adapt to metabolic hurdles. Considering the role of Tregs in dictating the outcome of tumor-specific responses, it would be important to understand the specific Treg metabolic profile that provides an advantage at the tumor site, to finally identify new targets for therapy. In this review, we will report and discuss the major recent findings about the metabolic pathways required for Treg development, expansion, migration and functions, in relation to tissue-derived signals. We will focus on the adipose tissue and the liver, where Tregs are exposed to a variety of metabolites, and on the tumor microenvironment as the context where Tregs develop the ability to adapt to perturbations in nutrient accessibility.
在过去的几十年中,免疫学家开始将细胞内代谢与免疫细胞的动态和功能联系起来考虑,尤其是当微环境改变与免疫功能障碍相关时。调节性 T 细胞(Treg)配备了各种免疫和代谢传感器,包括循环和组织驻留细胞,因此特别容易受到微环境信号的影响。此外,Treg 在免疫反应过程中经历代谢重编程,允许使用替代底物并为能量需求采用不同的代谢途径。支持 Treg 动态的代谢机制的研究由于多种限制导致结果令人费解,这些限制包括同一组织和不同组织之间的细胞群体异质性、在细胞过程中考虑所有相互关联的代谢途径的困难,以及 和 条件之间的差异。因此,Treg 对不同代谢途径(氧化而不是糖酵解)的依赖近年来一直是争议的焦点。代谢重编程和改变的生物能量学现在被认为是癌症的标志,并被癌细胞用来确定代谢物和分子的可用性,从而影响肿瘤浸润免疫细胞的命运。特别是,肿瘤微环境迫使代谢受限和大量协同的内在和外在压力,导致抗肿瘤免疫受损,并有利于 Treg 的产生、扩增和抑制功能。这使得人们理解 Treg 和传统 T 细胞具有不同的适应代谢障碍的能力。考虑到 Treg 在决定肿瘤特异性反应结果中的作用,了解在肿瘤部位提供优势的 Treg 特定代谢特征将非常重要,最终确定新的治疗靶点。在这篇综述中,我们将报告和讨论与组织衍生信号有关的 Treg 发育、扩增、迁移和功能所需的主要代谢途径的最新发现。我们将重点关注脂肪组织和肝脏,Treg 在这些组织中暴露于各种代谢物,以及肿瘤微环境,因为 Treg 在营养可及性的干扰下发展适应能力的背景。