A reduction in the number of CD T cells is a central part of the immunosuppression phase of sepsis and leads to impaired immune defense ability and increased mortality. Pyroptosis, a newly discovered programmed cell death, was confirmed to be an important mechanism of lymphocytopenia in a lot of human diseases and is under the regulation of autophagy. The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway is closely related to CD T-cell survival. Whether the mTOR pathway influences CD T cell pyroptosis by regulating autophagy remains unknown. In this study, a septic mouse model was developed using cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) to explore the degree of pyroptosis and autophagy of CD T cells. T-cell-specific mTOR/TSC1-knockout mice were used to investigate the role of mTOR pathway in the regulation of CD T cell pyroptosis. Bafilomycin, a specific autophagy inhibitor, was used to verify the regulatory effect of autophagy on pyroptosis in septic mice. We observed aggravated pyroptosis in CD T cells in CLP mice accompanied by impaired autophagy activity and an overactivated mTOR signaling pathway. Depletion of mTOR relieved autophagy deficiency and reduced the proportion of pyroptotic CD T cells. In T-cell-specific mTOR-knockout mice treated with bafilomycin, the protective effect of mTOR depletion vanished. This indicated that autophagy negatively regulates CD T cell pyroptosis, which is under the control of the mTOR pathway. Taken together, our findings emphasize the importance of pyroptosis in sepsis-induced lymphopenia and reveal the regulatory effects of the mTOR pathway and the role of autophagy in this regulation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intimp.2023.110964 | DOI Listing |
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