Nature Communications (Nov 2024)

The nutrient-sensing Rag-GTPase complex in B cells controls humoral immunity via TFEB/TFE3-dependent mitochondrial fitness

  • Xingxing Zhu,
  • Yue Wu,
  • Yanfeng Li,
  • Xian Zhou,
  • Jens O. Watzlawik,
  • Yin Maggie Chen,
  • Ariel L. Raybuck,
  • Daniel D. Billadeau,
  • Virginia Smith Shapiro,
  • Wolfdieter Springer,
  • Jie Sun,
  • Mark R. Boothby,
  • Hu Zeng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54344-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Germinal center (GC) formation, which is an integrant part of humoral immunity, involves energy-consuming metabolic reprogramming. Rag-GTPases are known to signal amino acid availability to cellular pathways that regulate nutrient distribution such as the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway and the transcription factors TFEB and TFE3. However, the contribution of these factors to humoral immunity remains undefined. Here, we show that B cell-intrinsic Rag-GTPases are critical for the development and activation of B cells. RagA/RagB deficient B cells fail to form GCs, produce antibodies, and to generate plasmablasts during both T-dependent (TD) and T-independent (TI) humoral immune responses. Deletion of RagA/RagB in GC B cells leads to abnormal dark zone (DZ) to light zone (LZ) ratio and reduced affinity maturation. Mechanistically, the Rag-GTPase complex constrains TFEB/TFE3 activity to prevent mitophagy dysregulation and maintain mitochondrial fitness in B cells, which are independent of canonical mTORC1 activation. TFEB/TFE3 deletion restores B cell development, GC formation in Peyer’s patches and TI humoral immunity, but not TD humoral immunity in the absence of Rag-GTPases. Collectively, our data establish the Rag GTPase-TFEB/TFE3 pathway as a likely mTORC1 independent mechanism to coordinating nutrient sensing and mitochondrial metabolism in B cells.