4.8 Article

Metabolic modeling of single Th17 cells reveals regulators of autoimmunity

Journal

CELL
Volume 184, Issue 16, Pages 4168-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.05.045

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chan Zuckerberg Biohub
  2. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) [NIH5U19MH114821]
  3. Canada First Research Excellence Fund
  4. NIH [RO1NS30843, R01AI144166, R01NS045937, P01AI073748, P01AI039671, P01AI056299]
  5. National Multiple Sclerosis Society [TA-1605-08590]
  6. Max Kade fellowship - Austrian Academy of Science (OAW)

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The study utilized the Compass algorithm in combination with single-cell RNA sequencing and flux balance analysis to reveal the link between metabolic states and functional variability of Th17 cells, validating the importance of metabolic switch for Th17 pathogenicity.
Metabolism is a major regulator of immune cell function, but it remains difficult to study the metabolic status of individual cells. Here, we present Compass, an algorithm to characterize cellular metabolic states based on single-cell RNA sequencing and flux balance analysis. We applied Compass to associate metabolic states with T helper 17 (Th17) functional variability (pathogenic potential) and recovered a metabolic switch between glycolysis and fatty acid oxidation, akin to known Th17/regulatory T cell (Treg) differences, which we validated by metabolic assays. Compass also predicted that Th17 pathogenicity was associated with arginine and downstream polyamine metabolism. Indeed, polyamine-related enzyme expression was enhanced in pathogenic Th17 and suppressed in Treg cells. Chemical and genetic perturbation of polyamine metabolism inhibited Th17 cytokines, promoted Foxp3 expression, and remodeled the transcriptome and epigenome of Th17 cells toward a Treg-like state. In vivo perturbations of the polyamine pathway altered the phenotype of encephalitogenic T cells and attenuated tissue inflammation in CNS autoimmunity.

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