Radioisotope-Based Protocol for Determination of Central Carbon Metabolism in T Cells

2020 
T lymphocytes are the major components of the adaptive immune system. It's been known that T cells are able to engage a diverse range of metabolic programs to meet the metabolic demands during their life cycle from early development, activation to functional differentiation. Central carbon metabolic pathways provide energy, reducing power, and biosynthetic precursors to support T cell homeostasis, proliferation, and immune functions. As such, quantitative or semiquantitative analysis of central carbon metabolic flux activities offers mechanistic details, as well as insights into the regulation of metabolic pathways and the impact of changing metabolic programs on T cell life cycle. Global profiling of cellular metabolites by mass spectrometry-based metabolomics and metabolic flux analysis (MFA) using radioactive and nonradioactive/stable isotope approaches are powerful tools for determination of central carbon metabolic pathway activity. Here, we describe in detail the procedure for the radioisotope-based approach of analyzing central carbon metabolic fluxes in T cells.
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