ACLY integrates metabolism and chromatin accessibility to enable B Cell activation and humoral immunity

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

B cell activation and differentiation into antibody-secreting cells require extensive metabolic and epigenetic remodeling, yet the molecular mechanisms that integrate these programs remain incompletely understood. ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY) links glucose metabolism to acetyl-CoA production, supporting lipid biosynthesis and protein acetylation. However, its role in humoral immunity has not been fully defined. Here, using genetic and integrated multi-omics approaches, we show that B cell activation is accompanied by coordinated metabolic, transcriptional, and epigenetic reprograming. Although ACLY is dispensable for B cell development and homeostasis, it is required to establish chromatin accessibility programs in activated B cells, with a more pronounced impact on the epigenetic landscape than on transcriptional output. ACLY-deficient B cells exhibit profound defects in TLR and BCR elicited activation, survival and metabolic fitness ex vivo . In vivo , B cell-intrinsic loss of ACLY results in impaired antigen-specific antibody production, associated with reduced germinal center and plasmablast formation, but normal homeostatic proliferation. Deletion of ACLY after B cell activation reduces plasmablast generation in vivo , indicating a continued requirement for ACLY beyond the initial activation phase. Together, these findings identify ACLY as a central regulator that links metabolism to epigenetic programing that supports B cell activation and humoral immunity.

Article activity feed