Publication | Open Access
Single-cell NAD(H) levels predict clonal lymphocyte expansion dynamics
17
Citations
59
References
2024
Year
ImmunologyBlood CellNicotinamide Adenine DinucleotideCellular PhysiologySignaling PathwayCell RegulationHematologyMetabolic SignalingCell SignalingMolecular PathwaySingle-cell AnalysisCell BiologySingle-cell NadMetabolic PathwaysSignal TransductionNad BiosynthesisCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
Adaptive immunity requires the expansion of high-affinity lymphocytes from a heterogeneous pool. Whereas current models explain this through signal transduction, we hypothesized that antigen affinity tunes discrete metabolic pathways to license clonal lymphocyte dynamics. Here, we identify nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) biosynthesis as a biochemical hub for the T cell receptor affinity-dependent metabolome. Through this central anabolic role, we found that NAD biosynthesis governs a quiescence exit checkpoint, thereby pacing proliferation. Normalizing cellular NAD(H) likewise normalizes proliferation across affinities, and enhancing NAD biosynthesis permits the expansion of lower affinity clones. Furthermore, single-cell differences in NAD(H) could predict division potential for both T and B cells, before the first division, unmixing proliferative heterogeneity. We believe that this supports a broader paradigm in which complex signaling networks converge on metabolic pathways to control single-cell behavior.
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