1. Gsk3 is a metabolic checkpoint regulator in B cells
- Author
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Matthew H. Cato, Parham Ramezani-Rad, James R. Woodgett, John R Apgar, Cindi Chen, Robert J. Benschop, Julia Jellusova, Adam D. Richardson, Robert C. Rickert, Elaine M Conner, and Charlotte R Leung
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cellular differentiation ,Antigens, CD19 ,CD40 Ligand ,Immunology ,Apoptosis ,Article ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,GSK-3 ,medicine ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Cells, Cultured ,B cell ,Cell Proliferation ,Mice, Knockout ,B-Lymphocytes ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta ,CD40 ,biology ,Cell growth ,Germinal center ,Cell Differentiation ,Germinal Center ,Cell biology ,Oxidative Stress ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mitochondrial biogenesis ,biology.protein ,Interleukin-4 ,Signal transduction ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Glycolysis ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
B cells predominate in a quiescent state until an antigen is encountered, which results in rapid growth, proliferation and differentiation of the B cells. These distinct cell states are probably accompanied by differing metabolic needs, yet little is known about the metabolic control of B cell fate. Here we show that glycogen synthase kinase 3 (Gsk3) is a metabolic sensor that promotes the survival of naive recirculating B cells by restricting cell mass accumulation. In antigen-driven responses, Gsk3 was selectively required for regulation of B cell size, mitochondrial biogenesis, glycolysis and production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), in a manner mediated by the co-stimulatory receptor CD40. Gsk3 was required to prevent metabolic collapse and ROS-induced apoptosis after glucose became limiting, functioning in part by repressing growth dependent on the myelocytomatosis oncoprotein c-Myc. Notably, we found that Gsk3 was required for the generation and maintenance of germinal center B cells, which require high glycolytic activity to support growth and proliferation in a hypoxic microenvironment.
- Published
- 2017
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