Fructose Promotes Cytoprotection in Melanoma Tumors and Resistance to Immunotherapy.
Lindsey M KuehmNiloufar KhojandiAlexander PieningLauryn E KlevornSimone C GeraudNicole R McLaughlinKristine GriffettThomas P BurrisKelly D PylesAfton M NelsonMary L PreussKevin A BockerstettMaureen J DonlinKyle S McCommisRichard J DiPaoloRyan M TeaguePublished in: Cancer immunology research (2020)
Checkpoint blockade immunotherapy relies on the empowerment of the immune system to fight cancer. Why some patients fail to achieve durable clinical responses is not well understood, but unique individual factors such as diet, obesity, and related metabolic syndrome could play a role. The link between obesity and patient outcomes remains controversial and has been mired by conflicting reports and limited mechanistic insight. We addressed this in a C57BL/6 mouse model of diet-induced obesity using a Western diet high in both fats and sugars. Obese mice bearing B16 melanoma or MC38 carcinoma tumors had impaired immune responses to immunotherapy and a reduced capacity to control tumor progression. Unexpectedly, these compromised therapeutic outcomes were independent of body mass and, instead, were directly attributed to dietary fructose. Melanoma tumors in mice on the high-fructose diet were resistant to immunotherapy and showed increased expression of the cytoprotective enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). This increase in HO-1 protein was recapitulated in human A375 melanoma cells exposed to fructose in culture. Induced expression of HO-1 shielded tumor cells from immune-mediated killing and was critical for resistance to checkpoint blockade immunotherapy, which could be overcome in vivo using a small-molecule inhibitor of HO-1. This study reveals dietary fructose as a driver of tumor immune evasion, identifying HO-1 expression as a mechanism of resistance and a promising molecular target for combination cancer immunotherapy.See article by Khojandi et al., p. 214.
Keyphrases
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- poor prognosis
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- small molecule
- type diabetes
- mouse model
- immune response
- pi k akt
- dna damage
- weight gain
- binding protein
- physical activity
- endothelial cells
- long non coding rna
- end stage renal disease
- cell cycle
- ejection fraction
- high glucose
- newly diagnosed
- protein protein
- chronic kidney disease
- papillary thyroid
- cardiovascular disease
- prognostic factors
- drug induced
- south africa
- emergency department
- cardiovascular risk factors
- signaling pathway
- patient reported outcomes
- lymph node metastasis