A new method to measure cell metabolism of rare cells in vivo reveals a
high oxidative phosphorylation dependence of lung T cells
- Aristeidis Roubanis,
- Morgane Hilaire,
- Morgane Le Teuff,
- Odile Devergne,
- Tim Sparwasser,
- Luciana Berod,
- Benoit Salomon
Abstract
Regulation of cellular metabolism is a central element governing the
fate and function of T cells. However, the in vivo metabolic
characteristics of rare cells, such as non-lymphoid tissue T cells, are
poorly understood due to experimental limitations. Most techniques
measuring cell metabolism require large cell numbers. The recent
SCENITHTM method allows studying the metabolism of rare cells by flow
cytometry. However, this technique requires cells to be isolated and
cultured ex vivo, which may alter their metabolism. Here, we propose a
new experimental approach, called in vivo SCENITH, to investigate the
cellular metabolism of T cells in vivo at steady state in the spleen and
lungs. For this purpose, we administered the metabolic modulators
directly in mice, instead of applying these reagents ex vivo, as in the
classical SCENITHTM method. Whereas ex vivo manipulation impacted
viability and phenotype of T cells, this toxic effect was not observed
in the in vivo SCENITH. We observed that conventional and regulatory T
cells shared similar metabolic profiles. Importantly, whereas spleen T
cells used both oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis, the metabolism
of T cell in the lungs was mainly based on oxidative phosphorylation.
Finally, metabolic inhibitors that interfere with protein translation
and energy availability downregulated Foxp3 expression in regulatory T
cells. These results describe an expansion of SCENITHTM that allows to
measure the metabolic profile of rare cells in vivo, revealing a high
dependence on oxidative phosphorylation of lung T cells.26 Nov 2024Submitted to Immunology & Cell Biology 27 Nov 2024Submission Checks Completed
27 Nov 2024Assigned to Editor
28 Nov 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned