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PET probes for distinct metabolic pathways have different cell specificities during immune responses in mice
Evan Nair-Gill, Stephanie M. Wiltzius, Xiao X. Wei, Donghui Cheng, Mireille Riedinger, Caius G. Radu, Owen N. Witte
Evan Nair-Gill, Stephanie M. Wiltzius, Xiao X. Wei, Donghui Cheng, Mireille Riedinger, Caius G. Radu, Owen N. Witte
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Research Article Immunology

PET probes for distinct metabolic pathways have different cell specificities during immune responses in mice

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Abstract

Clinical tools that measure changes in immune cell metabolism would improve the diagnosis and treatment of immune dysfunction. PET, utilizing probes for specific metabolic processes, detects regions of immune activation in vivo. In this study we investigated the immune cell specificity of PET probes for two different metabolic pathways: [18F]–2-fluorodeoxyglucose ([18F]-FDG) for glycolysis and [18F]–2-fluoro-d-(arabinofuranosyl)cytosine ([18F]-FAC) for deoxycytidine salvage. We isolated innate and adaptive immune cells from tissues of mice challenged with a retrovirus-induced sarcoma and measured their ability to accumulate FDG and FAC. We determined that the two probes had distinct patterns of accumulation: FDG accumulated to the highest levels in innate immune cells, while FAC accumulated predominantly in CD8+ T cells in a manner that correlated with cellular proliferation. This study demonstrates that innate and adaptive cell types differ in glycolytic and deoxycytidine salvage demands during an immune response and that these differential metabolic requirements can be detected with specific PET probes. Our findings have implications for the interpretation of clinical PET scans that use [18F]-FDG or [18F]-FAC to assess immune function in vivo and suggest potential applications of metabolic PET to monitor the effects of targeted immune modulation.

Authors

Evan Nair-Gill, Stephanie M. Wiltzius, Xiao X. Wei, Donghui Cheng, Mireille Riedinger, Caius G. Radu, Owen N. Witte

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Figure 4

Cytotoxic T cell populations with different activation phenotypes vary in their capacity to accumulate FAC.

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Cytotoxic T cell populations with different activation phenotypes vary i...
(A) Analysis of the activation status of CD8+ T cells sorted from the tumor and DLNs based on surface expression of CD25, CD44, and CD62L. CD8+ T cells from unchallenged animals are shown as controls (naive). (B) [3H]-FAC accumulation in CD8+ T cells isolated from the tumor and DLNs of MSV/MuLV-infected mice and from the lymph nodes of naive mice (same cell populations as in Figure 2B). (C) [3H]-FAC accumulation in CD8+ T cells from different anatomical sites plotted against the average percentage of those cells in S-G2-M of the cell cycle from 3 independent experiments.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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