Phosphofructokinase P fine-tunes T regulatory cell metabolism, function, and stability in systemic autoimmunity

Scherlinger, M., Pan, W., Hisada, R., Boulougoura, A., Yoshida, N., Vukelic, M., Umeda, M., Krishfield, S., Tsokos, M. G., & Tsokos, G. C. (2022). Phosphofructokinase P fine-tunes T regulatory cell metabolism, function, and stability in systemic autoimmunity. Sci Adv, 8, eadc9657.

Abstract

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease characterized by defective regulatory T (T(reg)) cells. Here, we demonstrate that a T cell-specific deletion of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase 4 (CaMK4) improves disease in B6.lpr lupus-prone mice and expands T(reg) cells. Mechanistically, CaMK4 phosphorylates the glycolysis rate-limiting enzyme 6-phosphofructokinase, platelet type (PFKP) and promotes aerobic glycolysis, while its end product fructose-1,6-biphosphate suppresses oxidative metabolism. In T(reg) cells, a CRISPR-Cas9-enabled Pfkp deletion recapitulated the metabolism of Camk4(-/-) T(reg) cells and improved their function and stability in vitro and in vivo. In SLE CD4(+) T cells, PFKP enzymatic activity correlated with SLE disease activity and pharmacologic inhibition of CaMK4-normalized PFKP activity, leading to enhanced T(reg) cell function. In conclusion, we provide molecular insights in the defective metabolism and function of T(reg) cells in SLE and identify PFKP as a target to fine-tune T(reg) cell metabolism and thereby restore their function.
Last updated on 02/17/2024