Mitochondrial complex I activity promotes antigen cross-presentation in dendritic cells

Sci Immunol. 2026 May 29;11(119):eaef0098. doi: 10.1126/sciimmunol.aef0098. Epub 2026 May 22.

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial metabolism modulates immune cell signaling, yet how individual electron transport chain complexes fine-tune dendritic cell (DC) function remains unclear. Here, we identify mitochondrial complex I (CI) as a critical metabolic checkpoint controlling antigen cross-presentation by DCs in mice. Deficiency of the CI subunit NDUFS4 in DCs led to the formation of a nonfunctional CI subcomplex, resulting in mildly impaired mitochondrial respiration without triggering a compensatory glycolytic shift. NDUFS4 deficiency limited endosomal escape of internalized antigens, thereby impairing antigen cross-presentation while largely preserving direct presentation. CI dysfunction lowered the NAD+/NADH ratio, concomitant with decreased ATP levels, and diminished neutral lipid storage and lipid peroxidation. Restoration of the NAD+/NADH ratio rescued cross-presentation in NDUFS4-deficient DCs. NDUFS2-deficient DCs showed similar defects in cross-presentation, which were also rescued by rebalancing the NAD+/NADH ratio. Together, these findings reveal a link between mitochondrial CI integrity, NAD+-driven redox metabolism, and antigen cross-presentation.

PMID:42172306 | DOI:10.1126/sciimmunol.aef0098