EBioMedicine (Dec 2021)

Kynurenine induces T cell fat catabolism and has limited suppressive effects in vivo

  • Peter J. Siska,
  • Jing Jiao,
  • Carina Matos,
  • Katrin Singer,
  • Raffaela S. Berger,
  • Katja Dettmer,
  • Peter J. Oefner,
  • Michelle D. Cully,
  • Zhonglin Wang,
  • William J. QuinnIII,
  • Kristen N. Oliff,
  • Benjamin J. Wilkins,
  • Lanette M. Christensen,
  • Liqing Wang,
  • Wayne W. Hancock,
  • Joseph A. Baur,
  • Matthew H. Levine,
  • Ines Ugele,
  • Roman Mayr,
  • Kathrin Renner,
  • Liang Zhou,
  • Marina Kreutz,
  • Ulf H. Beier

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 74
p. 103734

Abstract

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Background: L-kynurenine is a tryptophan-derived immunosuppressive metabolite and precursor to neurotoxic anthranilate and quinolinate. We evaluated the stereoisomer D-kynurenine as an immunosuppressive therapeutic which is hypothesized to produce less neurotoxic metabolites than L-kynurenine. Methods: L-/D-kynurenine effects on human and murine T cell function were examined in vitro and in vivo (homeostatic proliferation, colitis, cardiac transplant). Kynurenine effects on T cell metabolism were interrogated using [13C] glucose, glutamine and palmitate tracing. Kynurenine was measured in tissues from human and murine tumours and kynurenine-fed mice. Findings: We observed that 1 mM D-kynurenine inhibits T cell proliferation through apoptosis similar to L-kynurenine. Mechanistically, [13C]-tracing revealed that co-stimulated CD4+ T cells exposed to L-/D-kynurenine undergo increased β-oxidation depleting fatty acids. Replenishing oleate/palmitate restored effector T cell viability. We administered dietary D-kynurenine reaching tissue kynurenine concentrations of 19 μM, which is close to human kidney (6 μM) and head and neck cancer (14 μM) but well below the 1 mM required for apoptosis. D-kynurenine protected Rag1–/– mice from autoimmune colitis in an aryl-hydrocarbon receptor dependent manner but did not attenuate more stringent immunological challenges such as antigen mismatched cardiac allograft rejection. Interpretation: Our dietary kynurenine model achieved tissue concentrations at or above human cancer kynurenine and exhibited only limited immunosuppression. Sub-suppressive kynurenine concentrations in human cancers may limit the responsiveness to indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase inhibition evaluated in clinical trials. Funding: The study was supported by the NIH, the Else Kröner-Fresenius-Foundation, Laffey McHugh foundation, and American Society of Nephrology.

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