Multimodal analysis suggests differential immuno-metabolic crosstalk in lung squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma.
Brooks P LeitnerKevin B GivechianShyryn OspanovaAray BeisenbayevaKaterina PolitiRachel J PerryPublished in: NPJ precision oncology (2022)
Immunometabolism within the tumor microenvironment is an appealing target for precision therapy approaches in lung cancer. Interestingly, obesity confers an improved response to immune checkpoint inhibition in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), suggesting intriguing relationships between systemic metabolism and the immunometabolic environment in lung tumors. We hypothesized that visceral fat and 18 F-Fluorodeoxyglucose uptake influenced the tumor immunometabolic environment and that these bidirectional relationships differ in NSCLC subtypes, lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC). By integrating 18 F-FDG PET/CT imaging, bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing, and histology, we observed that LUSC had a greater dependence on glucose than LUAD. In LUAD tumors with high glucose uptake, glutaminase was downregulated, suggesting a tradeoff between glucose and glutamine metabolism, while in LUSC tumors with high glucose uptake, genes related to fatty acid and amino acid metabolism were also increased. We found that tumor-infiltrating T cells had the highest expression of glutaminase, ribosomal protein 37, and cystathionine gamma-lyase in NSCLC, highlighting the metabolic flexibility of this cell type. Further, we demonstrate that visceral adiposity, but not body mass index (BMI), was positively associated with tumor glucose uptake in LUAD and that patients with high BMI had favorable prognostic transcriptional profiles, while tumors of patients with high visceral fat had poor prognostic gene expression. We posit that metabolic adjunct therapy may be more successful in LUSC rather than LUAD due to LUAD's metabolic flexibility and that visceral adiposity, not BMI alone, should be considered when developing precision medicine approaches for the treatment of NSCLC.
Keyphrases
- insulin resistance
- high glucose
- body mass index
- squamous cell carcinoma
- weight gain
- small cell lung cancer
- gene expression
- endothelial cells
- adipose tissue
- single cell
- fatty acid
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- amino acid
- metabolic syndrome
- blood glucose
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- computed tomography
- high fat diet induced
- locally advanced
- positron emission tomography
- brain metastases
- weight loss
- dna methylation
- stem cells
- rna seq
- lymph node metastasis
- physical activity
- genome wide
- high throughput
- binding protein
- combination therapy
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- replacement therapy
- tyrosine kinase
- drug induced
- cell therapy
- protein protein