Hemoglobin alpha regulates T-lymphocyte activation and mitochondrial function
Emily C. Reed, Tatlock H. Lauten, Tamara Natour, Lauren J. Pitts, Caroline N. Jojo, Brooke L. Griffin, Sreeram Pasupuleti, Adam J. Case

TL;DR
Hemoglobin alpha in T-lymphocytes affects mitochondrial function and immune activation, with implications for autoimmune diseases.
Contribution
Identifies a novel role for hemoglobin alpha in regulating T-lymphocyte activation and mitochondrial function.
Findings
Hbα expression is dynamic and differs between CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes.
Loss of Hbα impairs mitochondrial function and cytokine production in CD4+ T-lymphocytes.
Hbα-deficient mice show reduced severity of EAE despite normal T-lymphocyte function.
Abstract
We have recently discovered hemoglobin alpha a1 (Hbα-a1 mRNA and Hbα protein) in T-lymphocytes and previously reported that its expression was sensitive to mitochondrial redox perturbations. However, outside of its occurrence and basic characterization, the functional role of Hbα in T-lymphocytes remained unknown. Herein, we identify Hbα in both CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocyte subsets, and found its expression is highly dynamic, differs between the two subtypes, and is dependent upon activation stage. Further, the loss of Hbα by use of a novel T-lymphocyte-specific Hbα knock-out mouse impairs mitochondrial function, dysregulates cytokine production, and lowers the activation threshold primarily in CD4+ T-lymphocytes, indicating a critical role for Hbα within this subset. While these data suggested the loss of Hbα in T-lymphocytes may promote aberrant activation of autoreactive T-lymphocytes,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHemoglobinopathies and Related Disorders · Hemoglobin structure and function · Blood groups and transfusion
