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Homeostasis and transitional activation of regulatory T cells require c-Myc.

Jordy SaraviaHu ZengYogesh DhunganaDaniel Bastardo BlancoThanh-Long M NguyenNicole M ChapmanYanyan WangApurva KannegantiShaofeng LiuJana L RaynorPeter VogelGeoffrey A NealePeter CarmelietHongbo Chi
Published in: Science advances (2020)
Regulatory T cell (Treg) activation and expansion occur during neonatal life and inflammation to establish immunosuppression, yet the mechanisms governing these events are incompletely understood. We report that the transcriptional regulator c-Myc (Myc) controls immune homeostasis through regulation of Treg accumulation and functional activation. Myc activity is enriched in Tregs generated during neonatal life and responding to inflammation. Myc-deficient Tregs show defects in accumulation and ability to transition to an activated state. Consequently, loss of Myc in Tregs results in an early-onset autoimmune disorder accompanied by uncontrolled effector CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses. Mechanistically, Myc regulates mitochondrial oxidative metabolism but is dispensable for fatty acid oxidation (FAO). Indeed, Treg-specific deletion of Cox10, which promotes oxidative phosphorylation, but not Cpt1a, the rate-limiting enzyme for FAO, results in impaired Treg function and maturation. Thus, Myc coordinates Treg accumulation, transitional activation, and metabolic programming to orchestrate immune homeostasis.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • regulatory t cells
  • early onset
  • oxidative stress
  • dendritic cells
  • fatty acid
  • gene expression
  • multiple sclerosis
  • immune response
  • heat shock
  • wild type