iScience (Jul 2023)

Alcohol-sourced acetate impairs T cell function by promoting cortactin acetylation

  • Vugar Azizov,
  • Michel Hübner,
  • Michael Frech,
  • Jörg Hofmann,
  • Marketa Kubankova,
  • Dennis Lapuente,
  • Matthias Tenbusch,
  • Jochen Guck,
  • Georg Schett,
  • Mario M. Zaiss

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 7
p. 107230

Abstract

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Summary: Alcohol is among the most widely consumed dietary substances. Excessive alcohol consumption damages the liver, heart, and brain. Alcohol also has strong immunoregulatory properties. Here, we report how alcohol impairs T cell function via acetylation of cortactin, a protein that binds filamentous actin and facilitates branching. Upon alcohol consumption, acetate, the metabolite of alcohol, accumulates in lymphoid organs. T cells exposed to acetate, exhibit increased acetylation of cortactin. Acetylation of cortactin inhibits filamentous actin binding and hence reduces T cell migration, immune synapse formation and activation. While mutated, acetylation-resistant cortactin rescues the acetate-induced inhibition of T cell migration, primary mouse cortactin knockout T cells exhibited impaired migration. Acetate-induced cytoskeletal changes effectively inhibited activation, proliferation, and immune synapse formation in T cells in vitro and in vivo in an influenza infection model in mice. Together these findings reveal cortactin as a possible target for mitigation of T cell driven autoimmune diseases.

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