Macroautophagy (called autophagy hereafter), a conserved cellular self-eating process that delivers cytoplasmic materials to lysosomes, has pleiotropic functions in immunological processes, including lymphocyte development, metabolism, and function1,2,3,4. Abnormalities in autophagy have been implicated in numerous immune-mediated diseases5. For example, autophagy levels are markedly increased in activated T cells and play a critical role in the function of autoreactive T cells, which regulate the pathogenesis of inflammatory demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) and its animal model, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE)6.
The autophagy machinery consists of several sequential steps: initiation, nucleation, elongation, fusion, and degradation2. The phosphoinositide 3-kinase PIK3C3/VPS34 forms a complex with BECN1/Beclin 1 and plays a central role in autophagosome nucleation7. To study the role of PIK3C3 in T-cell metabolism and function, we generated conditional knockout mice to selectively disrupt Pik3c3 in T cells, starting from their development in the thymus4. We first demonstrated that functional autophagy is severely blocked in Pik3c3-deficient T cells, which resulted in a substantial loss of circulating T cells and a reciprocal increase in the frequencies of other lymphoid cells in peripheral tissues4. Pik3c3-deficient T cells also showed increased apoptosis, impaired ex vivo T-cell receptor-induced proliferation, and defective CD4+ T cell-mediated immune responses to the model antigen ovalbumin4. These findings thus revealed a critical role for PIK3C3 in T-cell homeostasis and function.
As autophagy captures and degrades cytoplasmic components for cellular metabolic processes, it is linked with T-cell metabolism. Our recent publication8 reported that Pik3c3-deficient T cells exhibit impaired cellular metabolism, characterized by suppressed oxidative phosphorylation and abated glycolysis upon activation. Pik3c3-deficient CD4+ T cells also exhibited a deficit in T helper 1 cell differentiation. As a result, Pik3c3-deficient animals were resistant to EAE induced by active immunization with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) peptide. To dissect the effects of Pik3c3-deficiency on T-cell development and homeostasis versus T-cell function, we transferred 4-OH tamoxifen-treated pik3c3f/f;Rosa26-CreERT2+ cells derived from MOG-immunized animals to allelically marked wild-type (WT) animals. Mice that received Pik3c3-deficient T cells were protected, whereas animals that received Pik3c3-sufficient T cells developed signs of EAE. This EAE resistance was associated with reduced MOG-specific IFN-γ and IL-17A production. These findings are consistent with our previous data with the model antigen ovalbumin4, indicating defective in vivo antigen-specific CD4+ T-cell responses in the absence of PIK3C3.
Emerging evidence has revealed that components of the autophagy machinery can mediate non-autophagic functions9. The BECN1-PIK3C3 complex is shared by the canonical autophagy pathway, LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP)10, and LC3-associated endocytosis (LANDO)11. In an effort to explore the relevant pathway responsible for the effects of T cell-specific Pik3c3-deficiency on EAE, we evaluated mice lacking RUBCN/RUBICON, which is an essential component for LAP and LANDO11, but is not required for canonical autophagy11,12. We found that all rubcn−/− mice were equally susceptible as compared to WT control mice in developing EAE. These results indicated that the protection against EAE of mice with T cell-specific deletion of Pik3c3 was most likely unrelated to defective noncanonical autophagy. Nevertheless, these results cannot exclude the possibility that resistance to EAE in mice with T cell-specific deletion of Pik3c3 is due to defects in cellular processes other than autophagy such as endocytosis and intracellular vesicular trafficking that also involve PIK3C313.
Autophagy also regulates CD8+ T-cell responses14,15. Our study further showed that Pik3c3-deficiency in CD8+ T cells has limited effects on clearing tumor metastases, although its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. It is possible that Pik3c3 ablation caused dynamic changes in CD8+ effector T cells, NK cells, B cells, iNKT cells, and Tregs4, which together contributed to the unaltered susceptibility to tumor metastases. Collectively, these data suggest that autophagy plays differential roles in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells.
In conclusion, our data demonstrated that PIK3C3 is critical for CD4+ T-cell metabolism and CD4+ T cell-mediated EAE development (Fig. 1). These findings link autophagy and T-cell pathogenicity and identify T-cell autophagy as a major player in driving autoreactive CD4+ T cell-mediated central nervous system pathology. These findings also suggest that the immunomodulatory properties of PIK3C3 can be harnessed for the development of novel therapies for autoimmune diseases. Future studies should explore the non-autophagic functions of the autophagy machinery in the pathogenesis and treatment of autoimmune diseases.
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Acknowledgements
Work in the authors’ lab was supported by grants from the NIH (AI139046 to L.V.K.) and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (60006625 to L.V.K.).
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Yang, G., Van Kaer, L. PIK3C3/VPS34 links T-cell autophagy to autoimmunity. Cell Death Dis 11, 334 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-020-2568-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-020-2568-z