A lactate-SREBP2 signaling axis drives tolerogenic dendritic cell maturation and promotes cancer progression.
Michael P PlebanekYue XueY-Van NguyenNicholas C DeVitoXueying WangAlisha HoltzhausenGeorgia M BeasleyBalamayooran TheivanthiranBrent A HanksPublished in: Science immunology (2024)
Conventional dendritic cells (DCs) are essential mediators of antitumor immunity. As a result, cancers have developed poorly understood mechanisms to render DCs dysfunctional within the tumor microenvironment (TME). After identification of CD63 as a specific surface marker, we demonstrate that mature regulatory DCs (mregDCs) migrate to tumor-draining lymph node tissues and suppress DC antigen cross-presentation in trans while promoting T helper 2 and regulatory T cell differentiation. Transcriptional and metabolic studies showed that mregDC functionality is dependent on the mevalonate biosynthetic pathway and its master transcription factor, SREBP2. We found that melanoma-derived lactate activates SREBP2 in tumor DCs and drives conventional DC transformation into mregDCs via homeostatic or tolerogenic maturation. DC-specific genetic silencing and pharmacologic inhibition of SREBP2 promoted antitumor CD8 + T cell activation and suppressed melanoma progression. CD63 + mregDCs were found to reside within the lymph nodes of several preclinical tumor models and in the sentinel lymph nodes of patients with melanoma. Collectively, this work suggests that a tumor lactate-stimulated SREBP2-dependent program promotes CD63 + mregDC development and function while serving as a promising therapeutic target for overcoming immune tolerance in the TME.