In a groundbreaking study that unveils a crucial metabolic dimension in immune activation, researchers at the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC) have identified mitochondrial complex I as an essential driver of dendritic cell functionality. Their findings, recently published in Science Immunology, illuminate a previously unappreciated “mitochondrial checkpoint” necessary for these pivotal immune cells to effectively stimulate T lymphocytes, which are a cornerstone of the adaptive immune response against viral infections and tumors.
Dendritic cells (DCs) serve as immunological sentinels, tasked with detecting pathogens and malignancies while instructing T cells on targets to attack. This new research reveals that the immunostimulatory prowess of dendritic cells is intimately linked to the bioenergetic and metabolic integrity provided by mitochondrial complex I, a fundamental component of the electron transport chain responsible for cellular respiration and energy production. Without the proper functioning of this complex, dendritic cells falter in their capacity to prime T lymphocytes, resulting in diminished immune responses.
The study meticulously demonstrates that impairment of mitochondrial complex I disrupts the delicate balance between NADH and NAD+ within dendritic cells, causing a metabolic bottleneck that hinders their ability to process and present antigens. Antigen cross-presentation, a sophisticated mechanism by which dendritic cells load peptides derived from viruses or tumor cells onto MHC class I molecules, is critically affected. This mechanism is indispensable for the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes that can eliminate infected or neoplastic cells.
Importantly, the research highlights a method to pharmacologically restore this metabolic imbalance. By rebalancing the intracellular NADH-to-NAD+ ratio, the functional capacity of dendritic cells to activate T cells can be resurrected, even in the context of complex I deficiency. This revelation opens promising therapeutic avenues, suggesting that metabolic modulation could enhance the efficacy of immunotherapies, particularly in cancer treatments where the tumor microenvironment often sabotages mitochondrial function in immune cells.
David Sancho, the principal investigator at CNIC, emphasizes the translational significance of these findings. He explains, “Mitochondrial complex I is not merely an energy provider but a decisive metabolic switch that governs dendritic cell immune functionality. Targeting this metabolic checkpoint could revolutionize how we innovate in immunotherapy and vaccine design, especially under immune-compromised and tumor-induced metabolic stresses.”
Co-first authors Sofía C. Khouili and Elena Priego provide further insights into the metabolic nuances uncovered by the study. Khouili remarks on the antigen presentation deficit observed in complex I-impaired dendritic cells, noting that this deficit translates into a profound reduction in T cell activation and the overall immune response. Priego adds that this dysfunction is a consequence of an elevated NADH-to-NAD+ ratio, and that pharmacological interventions aimed at restoring this ratio can reinstate the dendritic cells’ immunostimulatory behavior both in viral and oncologic contexts.
The implications of these findings are particularly profound in the tumor microenvironment, which is notoriously hostile toward the metabolism of immune cells. This hostile milieu can suppress complex I activity, thereby disabling dendritic cells and hindering their capacity to orchestrate effective antitumor T-cell responses. By identifying mitochondrial complex I as a metabolic checkpoint within dendritic cells, the study provides a blueprint for overcoming tumor-induced immune evasion.
Furthermore, this research reevaluates the conceptual framework of immunometabolism, a burgeoning field that explores how metabolism influences immune cell function. It demonstrates critical interplay between mitochondrial respiratory activity and antigen presentation pathways, suggesting that metabolic health is a prerequisite for the optimal functioning of immune cell subsets.
The restoration of dendritic cell function through the manipulation of metabolic pathways paves the way not only for improving therapeutic vaccines targeting viral infections and cancers but could also inspire novel combinatorial strategies. These might integrate metabolic modulators with traditional immunotherapies, potentially increasing response rates and overcoming resistance mechanisms that have limited clinical success.
This study also reaffirms the centrality of mitochondrial biology beyond energy production, positioning mitochondrial complex I as a crucial regulator of immune cell fate and function. The intrinsic chemical milieu established by mitochondrial metabolism emerges as a key determinant in the immune system’s capacity to mount efficient and targeted responses.
In summary, the identification of mitochondrial complex I activity as a pivotal factor controlling dendritic cell-mediated antigen cross-presentation represents a significant advancement in understanding immune regulation. By unveiling a metabolic checkpoint that dictates immune cell instruction, the research offers a promising translational framework for designing next-generation vaccines and immunotherapies that harness and augment the body’s natural defense systems against disease.
Subject of Research: Cells
Article Title: Mitochondrial complex I activity promotes antigen cross-presentation in dendritic cells
News Publication Date: 22-May-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aef0098
Image Credits: CNIC
Keywords: Immunology, Immune cells, Immune disorders, Medical treatments, Preventive medicine, Translational medicine
Tags: adaptive immune response to tumorsbioenergetics of dendritic cellsdendritic cell metabolism and functionelectron transport chain and immune responseenhancing immunotherapy through mitochondrial functionmetabolic bottleneck in dendritic cellsmetabolic regulation of antigen presentationmitochondrial checkpoint in immunitymitochondrial complex I in immune activationmitochondrial role in immunotherapy effectivenessNADH/NAD+ balance in immune cellsT lymphocyte stimulation by dendritic cells



