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Alcohol-driven metabolic reprogramming promotes development of RORγt-deficient thymic lymphoma.

Rui SunChao LeiLiang ChenLiqing HeHaixun GuoXiang ZhangWenke FengJun YanCraig J McClainZhongbin Deng
Published in: Oncogene (2022)
RORγt is a master regulator of Th17 cells. Despite evidence linking RORγt deficiency/inhibition with metastatic thymic T cell lymphomas, the role of RORγt in lymphoma metabolism is unknown. Chronic alcohol consumption plays a causal role in many human cancers. The risk of T cell lymphoma remains unclear in humans with alcohol use disorders (AUD) after chronic RORγt inhibition. Here we demonstrated that alcohol consumption accelerates RORγt deficiency-induced lymphomagenesis. Loss of RORγt signaling in the thymus promotes aerobic glycolysis and glutaminolysis and increases allocation of glutamine carbon into lipids. Importantly, alcohol consumption results in a shift from aerobic glycolysis to glutaminolysis. Both RORγt deficiency- and alcohol-induced metabolic alterations are mediated by c-Myc, as silencing of c-Myc decreases the effects of alcohol consumption and RORγt deficiency on glutaminolysis, biosynthesis, and tumor growth in vivo. The ethanol-mediated c-Myc activation coupled with increased glutaminolysis underscore the critical role of RORγt-Myc signaling and translation in lymphoma.
Keyphrases
  • alcohol consumption
  • endothelial cells
  • diffuse large b cell lymphoma
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • small cell lung cancer
  • high glucose
  • signaling pathway
  • fatty acid