Biomedicines (Mar 2022)

CD5 Deficiency Alters Helper T Cell Metabolic Function and Shifts the Systemic Metabolome

  • Kiara V. Whitley,
  • Claudia M. Tellez Freitas,
  • Carlos Moreno,
  • Christopher Haynie,
  • Joshua Bennett,
  • John C. Hancock,
  • Tyler D. Cox,
  • Brett E. Pickett,
  • K. Scott Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10030704
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 704

Abstract

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Metabolic function plays a key role in immune cell activation, destruction of foreign pathogens, and memory cell generation. As T cells are activated, their metabolic profile is significantly changed due to signaling cascades mediated by the T cell receptor (TCR) and co-receptors found on their surface. CD5 is a T cell co-receptor that regulates thymocyte selection and peripheral T cell activation. The removal of CD5 enhances T cell activation and proliferation, but how this is accomplished is not well understood. We examined how CD5 specifically affects CD4+ T cell metabolic function and systemic metabolome by analyzing serum and T cell metabolites from CD5WT and CD5KO mice. We found that CD5 removal depletes certain serum metabolites, and CD5KO T cells have higher levels of several metabolites. Transcriptomic analysis identified several upregulated metabolic genes in CD5KO T cells. Bioinformatic analysis identified glycolysis and the TCA cycle as metabolic pathways promoted by CD5 removal. Functional metabolic analysis demonstrated that CD5KO T cells have higher oxygen consumption rates (OCR) and higher extracellular acidification rates (ECAR). Together, these findings suggest that the loss of CD5 is linked to CD4+ T cell metabolism changes in metabolic gene expression and metabolite concentration.

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