Autophagy-regulated mitochondrial inheritance controls early CD8(+) T cell fate commitment

Autor/innen

  • Mariana Borsa
  • Ana Victoria Lechuga-Vieco
  • Amir H. Kayvanjoo
  • Edward Jenkins
  • Yavuz Yazicioglu
  • Ewoud B. Compeer
  • Felix C. Richter
  • Simon Rapp
  • Robert Mitchell
  • Tom Youdale
  • Hien Bui
  • Emilia Kuuluvainen
  • Michael L. Dustin
  • Linda V. Sinclair
  • Pekka Katajisto
  • Anna Katharina Simon

Journal

  • Nature Cell Biology

Quellenangabe

  • Nat Cell Biol 28 (1): 66-81

Zusammenfassung

  • T cell immunity deteriorates with age, accompanied by a decline in autophagy and asymmetric cell division. Here we show that autophagy regulates mitochondrial inheritance in CD8(+) T cells. Using a mouse model that enables sequential tagging of mitochondria in mother and daughter cells, we demonstrate that autophagy-deficient T cells fail to clear premitotic old mitochondria and inherit them symmetrically. By contrast, autophagy-competent cells that partition mitochondria asymmetrically produce daughter cells with distinct fates: those retaining old mitochondria exhibit reduced memory potential, whereas those that have not inherited old mitochondria and exhibit higher mitochondrial turnover are long-lived and expand upon cognate-antigen challenge. Multiomics analyses suggest that early fate divergence is driven by distinct metabolic programmes, with one-carbon metabolism activated in cells retaining premitotic mitochondria. These findings advance our understanding of how T cell diversity is imprinted early during division and support the development of strategies to modulate T cell function.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s41556-025-01835-2