Bart Everts
Leiden University Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Bart Everts.
Immunity | 2012
Gerritje J.W. van der Windt; Bart Everts; Chih-Hao Chang; Jonathan D. Curtis; Tori C. Freitas; Eyal Amiel; Edward J. Pearce; Erika L. Pearce
CD8(+) T cells undergo major metabolic changes upon activation, but how metabolism influences the establishment of long-lived memory T cells after infection remains a key question. We have shown here that CD8(+) memory T cells, but not CD8(+) T effector (Teff) cells, possessed substantial mitochondrial spare respiratory capacity (SRC). SRC is the extra capacity available in cells to produce energy in response to increased stress or work and as such is associated with cellular survival. We found that interleukin-15 (IL-15), a cytokine critical for CD8(+) memory T cells, regulated SRC and oxidative metabolism by promoting mitochondrial biogenesis and expression of carnitine palmitoyl transferase (CPT1a), a metabolic enzyme that controls the rate-limiting step to mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO). These results show how cytokines control the bioenergetic stability of memory T cells after infection by regulating mitochondrial metabolism.
Immunity | 2015
Abhishek K. Jha; Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Alexey Sergushichev; Vicky Lampropoulou; Yulia Ivanova; Ekaterina Loginicheva; Karina Chmielewski; Kelly M. Stewart; Juliet Ashall; Bart Everts; Edward J. Pearce; Edward M. Driggers; Maxim N. Artyomov
Macrophage polarization involves a coordinated metabolic and transcriptional rewiring that is only partially understood. By using an integrated high-throughput transcriptional-metabolic profiling and analysis pipeline, we characterized systemic changes during murine macrophage M1 and M2 polarization. M2 polarization was found to activate glutamine catabolism and UDP-GlcNAc-associated modules. Correspondingly, glutamine deprivation or inhibition of N-glycosylation decreased M2 polarization and production of chemokine CCL22. In M1 macrophages, we identified a metabolic break at Idh, the enzyme that converts isocitrate to alpha-ketoglutarate, providing mechanistic explanation for TCA cycle fragmentation. (13)C-tracer studies suggested the presence of an active variant of the aspartate-arginosuccinate shunt that compensated for this break. Consistently, inhibition of aspartate-aminotransferase, a key enzyme of the shunt, inhibited nitric oxide and interleukin-6 production in M1 macrophages, while promoting mitochondrial respiration. This systems approach provides a highly integrated picture of the physiological modules supporting macrophage polarization, identifying potential pharmacologic control points for both macrophage phenotypes.
Nature Immunology | 2014
Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Bart Everts; Yulia Ivanova; David O'Sullivan; Marcia Nascimento; Amber M. Smith; Wandy L. Beatty; Latisha Love-Gregory; Wing Y. Lam; Christina M. O'Neill; Cong Yan; Hong Du; Nada A. Abumrad; Joseph F. Urban; Maxim N. Artyomov; Erika L. Pearce; Edward J. Pearce
Alternative (M2) activation of macrophages driven via the α-chain of the receptor for interleukin 4 (IL-4Rα) is important for immunity to parasites, wound healing, the prevention of atherosclerosis and metabolic homeostasis. M2 polarization is dependent on fatty acid oxidation (FAO), but the source of the fatty acids that support this metabolic program has not been clear. We found that the uptake of triacylglycerol substrates via the scavenger receptor CD36 and their subsequent lipolysis by lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) was important for the engagement of elevated oxidative phosphorylation, enhanced spare respiratory capacity (SRC), prolonged survival and expression of genes that together define M2 activation. Inhibition of lipolysis suppressed M2 activation during infection with a parasitic helminth and blocked protective responses to this pathogen. Our findings delineate a critical role for cell-intrinsic lysosomal lipolysis in M2 activation.
Nature Immunology | 2014
Bart Everts; Eyal Amiel; Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Amber M. Smith; Chih-Hao Chang; Wing Y. Lam; Veronika Redmann; Tori C. Freitas; Julianna Blagih; Gerritje J.W. van der Windt; Maxim N. Artyomov; Russell G. Jones; Erika L. Pearce; Edward J. Pearce
The ligation of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) leads to rapid activation of dendritic cells (DCs). However, the metabolic requirements that support this process remain poorly defined. We found that DC glycolytic flux increased within minutes of exposure to TLR agonists and that this served an essential role in supporting the de novo synthesis of fatty acids for the expansion of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi required for the production and secretion of proteins that are integral to DC activation. Signaling via the kinases TBK1, IKKɛ and Akt was essential for the TLR-induced increase in glycolysis by promoting the association of the glycolytic enzyme HK-II with mitochondria. In summary, we identified the rapid induction of glycolysis as an integral component of TLR signaling that is essential for the anabolic demands of the activation and function of DCs.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009
Bart Everts; Georgia Perona-Wright; Hermelijn H. Smits; Cornelis H. Hokke; Alwin J. van der Ham; Colin M. Fitzsimmons; Michael J. Doenhoff; Jürgen van der Bosch; Katja Mohrs; Helmut Haas; Markus Mohrs; Maria Yazdanbakhsh; Gabriele Schramm
Soluble egg antigens of the parasitic helminth Schistosoma mansoni (S. mansoni egg antigen [SEA]) induce strong Th2 responses both in vitro and in vivo. However, the specific molecules that prime the development of Th2 responses have not been identified. We report that omega-1, a glycoprotein which is secreted from S. mansoni eggs and present in SEA, is capable of conditioning human monocyte-derived dendritic cells in vitro to drive T helper 2 (Th2) polarization with similar characteristics as whole SEA. Furthermore, using IL-4 dual reporter mice, we show that both natural and recombinant omega-1 alone are sufficient to generate Th2 responses in vivo, even in the absence of IL-4R signaling. Finally, omega-1–depleted SEA displays an impaired capacity for Th2 priming in vitro, but not in vivo, suggesting the existence of additional factors within SEA that can compensate for the omega-1–mediated effects. Collectively, we identify omega-1, a single component of SEA, as a potent inducer of Th2 responses.
Blood | 2012
Bart Everts; Eyal Amiel; Gerritje J.W. van der Windt; Tori C. Freitas; Robert Chott; Kevin E. Yarasheski; Erika L. Pearce; Edward J. Pearce
TLR agonists initiate a rapid activation program in dendritic cells (DCs) that requires support from metabolic and bioenergetic resources. We found previously that TLR signaling promotes aerobic glycolysis and a decline in oxidative phosphorylation (OXHPOS) and that glucose restriction prevents activation and leads to premature cell death. However, it remained unclear why the decrease in OXPHOS occurs under these circumstances. Using real-time metabolic flux analysis, in the present study, we show that mitochondrial activity is lost progressively after activation by TLR agonists in inflammatory blood monocyte-derived DCs that express inducible NO synthase. We found that this is because of inhibition of OXPHOS by NO and that the switch to glycolysis is a survival response that serves to maintain ATP levels when OXPHOS is inhibited. Our data identify NO as a profound metabolic regulator in inflammatory monocyte-derived DCs.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Gerritje J.W. van der Windt; David O’Sullivan; Bart Everts; Stanley Ching-Cheng Huang; Michael D. Buck; Jonathan D. Curtis; Chih-Hao Chang; Amber M. Smith; Teresa Ai; Brandon Faubert; Russell G. Jones; Edward J. Pearce; Erika L. Pearce
A characteristic of memory T (TM) cells is their ability to mount faster and stronger responses to reinfection than naïve T (TN) cells do in response to an initial infection. However, the mechanisms that allow this rapid recall are not completely understood. We found that CD8 TM cells have more mitochondrial mass than CD8 TN cells and, that upon activation, the resulting secondary effector T (TE) cells proliferate more quickly, produce more cytokines, and maintain greater ATP levels than primary effector T cells. We also found that after activation, TM cells increase oxidative phosphorylation and aerobic glycolysis and sustain this increase to a greater extent than TN cells, suggesting that greater mitochondrial mass in TM cells not only promotes oxidative capacity, but also glycolytic capacity. We show that mitochondrial ATP is essential for the rapid induction of glycolysis in response to activation and the initiation of proliferation of both TN and TM cells. We also found that fatty acid oxidation is needed for TM cells to rapidly respond upon restimulation. Finally, we show that dissociation of the glycolysis enzyme hexokinase from mitochondria impairs proliferation and blocks the rapid induction of glycolysis upon T-cell receptor stimulation in TM cells. Our results demonstrate that greater mitochondrial mass endows TM cells with a bioenergetic advantage that underlies their ability to rapidly recall in response to reinfection.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012
Bart Everts; Leonie Hussaarts; Nicole N. Driessen; Moniek H. J. Meevissen; Gabriele Schramm; Alwin J. van der Ham; Barbara van der Hoeven; Thomas Scholzen; Sven Burgdorf; Markus Mohrs; Edward J. Pearce; Cornelis H. Hokke; Helmut Haas; Hermelijn H. Smits; Maria Yazdanbakhsh
Schistosome ribonuclease Omega-1 primes DCs to generate Th2 responses by binding and internalization by the mannose receptor and by subsequently impairing protein synthesis.
Nature Reviews Immunology | 2015
Edward J. Pearce; Bart Everts
The past 15 years have seen enormous advances in our understanding of the receptor and signalling systems that allow dendritic cells (DCs) to respond to pathogens or other danger signals and initiate innate and adaptive immune responses. We are now beginning to appreciate that many of these pathways not only stimulate changes in the expression of genes that control DC immune functions, but also affect metabolic pathways, thereby integrating the cellular requirements of the activation process. In this Review, we focus on this relatively new area of research and attempt to describe an integrated view of DC immunometabolism.
Immunity | 2015
Roxane Tussiwand; Bart Everts; Gary E. Grajales-Reyes; Nicole M. Kretzer; Arifumi Iwata; Juhi Bagaitkar; Xiaodi Wu; Rachel Wong; David A. Anderson; Theresa L. Murphy; Edward J. Pearce; Kenneth M. Murphy
The two major lineages of classical dendritic cells (cDCs) express and require either IRF8 or IRF4 transcription factors for their development and function. IRF8-dependent cDCs promote anti-viral and T-helper 1 (Th1) cell responses, whereas IRF4-expressing cDCs have been implicated in controlling both Th2 and Th17 cell responses. Here, we have provided evidence that Kruppel-like factor 4 (Klf4) is required in IRF4-expressing cDCs to promote Th2, but not Th17, cell responses in vivo. Conditional Klf4 deletion within cDCs impaired Th2 cell responses during Schistosoma mansoni infection, Schistosoma egg antigen (SEA) immunization, and house dust mite (HDM) challenge without affecting cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL), Th1 cell, or Th17 cell responses to herpes simplex virus, Toxoplasma gondii, and Citrobacter rodentium infections. Further, Klf4 deletion reduced IRF4 expression in pre-cDCs and resulted in selective loss of IRF4-expressing cDCs subsets in several tissues. These results indicate that Klf4 guides a transcriptional program promoting IRF4-expressing cDCs heterogeneity.