| Literature DB >> 29058703 |
Michio Miyajima1, Baihao Zhang1,2, Yuki Sugiura3, Kazuhiro Sonomura4, Matteo M Guerrini1, Yumi Tsutsui1, Mikako Maruya1, Alexis Vogelzang1, Kenji Chamoto2, Kurara Honda3, Takatoshi Hikida5, Satomi Ito1, Hongyan Qin6, Rikako Sanuki7, Keiichiro Suzuki1, Takahisa Furukawa7, Yasushi Ishihama8, Fumihiko Matsuda4, Makoto Suematsu3, Tasuku Honjo2, Sidonia Fagarasan1.
Abstract
T cells reorganize their metabolic profiles after being activated, but the systemic metabolic effect of sustained activation of the immune system has remained unexplored. Here we report that augmented T cell responses in Pdcd1-/- mice, which lack the inhibitory receptor PD-1, induced a metabolic serum signature characterized by depletion of amino acids. We found that the depletion of amino acids in serum was due to the accumulation of amino acids in activated Pdcd1-/- T cells in the lymph nodes. A systemic decrease in tryptophan and tyrosine led to substantial deficiency in the neurotransmitters serotonin and dopamine in the brain, which resulted in behavioral changes dominated by anxiety-like behavior and exacerbated fear responses. Together these data indicate that excessive activation of T cells causes a systemic metabolomic shift with consequences that extend beyond the immune system.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29058703 DOI: 10.1038/ni.3867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Immunol ISSN: 1529-2908 Impact factor: 25.606