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Home - Biology - A metabolic brake on the immune system

Biology

A metabolic brake on the immune system

Last updated: February 28, 2026 1:06 pm
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A metabolic brake on the immune system

Researchers have identified a new way cells can dial down immune signaling. They discovered that pyruvate, a common metabolic byproduct, can directly attach to the STAT1 protein—a central regulator of interferon responses—in a process called pyruvylation. This modification suppresses STAT1’s activity, effectively acting as a natural off-switch for antiviral and inflammatory signaling pathways. The finding reveals a direct, post-translational link between core cellular metabolism and the control of immune activation.

Why it might matter to you:
This discovery of a metabolite directly regulating a key immune transcription factor opens a new dimension in understanding immune evasion and modulation. For your work in vaccine adjuvants and inflammatory conditions, it suggests that the local metabolic environment could be a critical, targetable factor for fine-tuning immune responses. Manipulating this pyruvylation pathway might offer a novel strategy to either enhance vaccine efficacy or suppress pathological inflammation.


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