TB Research

Metformin enhances anti-mycobacterial responses by educating CD8+ T-cell immunometabolic circuits

Julia Böhme, Núria Martínez, Shamin Li, Andrea Lee, Mardiana Marzuki, Anteneh Mehari Tizazu, David F. Ackart, Jessica Haugen Frenkel, et al. (21 authors)

Nature Communications · 2020-10

Abstract

Abstract Patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) have a lower risk of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, progression from infection to tuberculosis (TB) disease, TB morality and TB recurrence, when being treated with metformin. However, a detailed mechanistic understanding of these protective effects is lacking. Here, we use mass cytometry to show that metformin treatment expands a population of memory-like antigen-inexperienced CD8 + CXCR3 + T cells in naive mice, and in healthy individuals and patients with T2D. Metformin-educated CD8 + T cells have increased (i) mitochondrial mass, oxidative phosphorylation, and fatty acid oxidation; (ii) survival capacity; and (iii) anti-mycobacterial properties. CD8 + T cells from Cxcr3 −/− mice do not exhibit this metformin-mediated metabolic programming. In BCG-vaccinated mice and guinea pigs, metformin enhances immunogenicity and protective efficacy against M. tuberculosis challenge. Collectively, these results demonstrate an important function of CD8 + T cells in metformin-derived host metabolic-fitness towards M. tuberculosis infection.

MeSH terms

  • Metformin
  • CXCR3
  • Mass cytometry
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • CD8
  • Immunology
  • Tuberculosis
  • Medicine
  • Cytotoxic T cell
  • Immunogenicity
  • Biology
  • Diabetes mellitus