# The biochemical basis of immune cell reprogramming: how cellular metabolism regulates epigenetic remodeling during T cell differentiation

> **NIH NIH K22** · CHILDREN'S HOSP OF PHILADELPHIA · 2020 · $108,000

## Abstract

Project Summary
T lymphocyte dysfunction underlies autoimmunity, chronic infection, and cancer. Breakthrough therapies that
reprogram defective T cells represent one of the most promising strategies for overcoming these monumental health
challenges. This has primarily been accomplished by modulating signal transduction in T cells through the use of
antibodies and recombinant cytokines that promote specific T cell functional programs. While there has been major
progress in understanding the signaling pathways and the epigenetic mechanisms that govern T cell reprogramming,
the biochemical architecture that supports these processes has largely been overlooked. Advances in the field of cancer
biology have revealed cell metabolism plays an active regulatory role in cell signaling and epigenetics, but it is unclear
how stereotyped or varied this process is in a diverse and dynamic system like the immune system. I have generated
preliminary data showing that mitochondrial metabolism regulates epigenetic remodeling during helper T (Th) cell
differentiation in a Th cell program specific manner, such that individual metabolic processes influence specific histone
lysine modifications depending on differentiating conditions. As outlined in this proposal, I will set out to
systematically delineate the molecular mechanisms that directly explain this metabolic-epigenetic axis during T cell
reprogramming. I will employ a Cas9 screening system I have developed and used with great success in deconvoluting
how metabolic networks support primary immune cell activation and function. By targeting individual metabolic
enzymes with CRISPR, we will seek to elucidate how mitochondrial metabolism and Warburg metabolism influence
histone methylation and acetylation. We will then identify the downstream epigenetic modifying enzymes that are
responsible for the observed phenotype by performing epistasis/rescue studies whereby we target both the metabolic
enzyme and the candidate epigenetic modifier with tandem sgRNA expression vectors. These in vitro findings will
then be validated using in vivo transfer models with CRISPR targeted T cells. To expand on the findings from my
postdoctoral work, I will also take a second parallel approach, where I will aim to discover novel metabolic pathways
that regulate epigenetic remodeling in differentiating T cells. To accomplish this, I will take advantage of a sgRNA
library I created and already successfully used to study how metabolism controls T cell activation, in which every gene
for a metabolic enzyme or transporter is targeted by CRISPR. I will use with this metabolome sgRNA library to identify
metabolic pathways necessary for H3K9 and H3K27 acetylation and methylation, unique to Th17 or Treg conditions.
These studies will not only elucidate how metabolism controls cell transcriptional programming by setting the
biochemical environment in which epigenetic remodeling occurs, but will also inform the design of new, low cost
metabolis...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9948576
- **Project number:** 5K22AI141758-02
- **Recipient organization:** CHILDREN'S HOSP OF PHILADELPHIA
- **Principal Investigator:** Will H. Bailis
- **Activity code:** K22 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $108,000
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-06-01 → 2021-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9948576

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9948576, The biochemical basis of immune cell reprogramming: how cellular metabolism regulates epigenetic remodeling during T cell differentiation (5K22AI141758-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-26 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9948576. Licensed CC0.

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