Naive CD8+ T cells differentiating into effector T cells increase glucose uptake and shift from quiescent to anabolic metabolism. Although much is known about the metabolism of cultured T cells, how T cells use nutrients during immune responses in vivo is less well defined. Here, we combined bioenergetic profiling and 13C-glucose infusion techniques to investigate the metabolism of CD8+ T cells responding to Listeria infection. In contrast to in vitro-activated T cells, which display hallmarks of Warburg metabolism, physiologically activated CD8+ T cells displayed greater rates of oxidative metabolism, higher bioenergetic capacity, differential use of pyruvate, and prominent flow of 13C-glucose carbon to anabolic pathways, including nucleotide and serine biosynthesis. Glucose-dependent serine biosynthesis mediated by the enzyme Phgdh was essential for CD8+ T cell expansion in vivo. Our data highlight fundamental differences in glucose use by pathogen-specific T cells in vivo, illustrating the impact of environment on T cell metabolic phenotypes.
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