Control of nutrient uptake by IRF4 orchestrates innate immune memory

Nature Immunology(2023)

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Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells are innate cytotoxic lymphocytes with adaptive immune features, including antigen specificity, clonal expansion and memory. As such, NK cells share many transcriptional and epigenetic programs with their adaptive CD8+ T cell siblings. Various signals ranging from antigen, co-stimulation and proinflammatory cytokines are required for optimal NK cell responses in mice and humans during virus infection; however, the integration of these signals remains unclear. In this study, we identified that the transcription factor IRF4 integrates signals to coordinate the NK cell response during mouse cytomegalovirus infection. Loss of IRF4 was detrimental to the expansion and differentiation of virus-specific NK cells. This defect was partially attributed to the inability of IRF4-deficient NK cells to uptake nutrients required for survival and memory generation. Altogether, these data suggest that IRF4 is a signal integrator that acts as a secondary metabolic checkpoint to orchestrate the adaptive response of NK cells during viral infection. Santosa et al. show that IRF4 is upregulated upon NK cell activation and acts as a signal integrator for the differentiation and expansion of mouse cytomegalovirus-specific NK cells by partly controlling nutrient uptake required for adaptive NK cell responses.
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irf4 orchestrates,nutrient uptake
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