Lactate modulates CD4+ T-cell polarization and induces an immunosuppressive environment, which sustains prostate carcinoma progression via TLR8/miR21 axis.
G ComitoA IscaroM BacciAndrea MorandiL IppolitoM ParriI MontagnaniM R RaspolliniS SerniL SimeoniE GiannoniP ChiarugiPublished in: Oncogene (2019)
Leukocyte infiltration plays an active role in controlling tumor development. In the early stages of carcinogenesis, T cells counteract tumor growth. However, in advanced stages, cancer cells and infiltrating stromal components interfere with the immune control and instruct immune cells to support, rather than counteract, tumor malignancy, via cell-cell contact or soluble mediators. In particular, metabolites are emerging as active players in driving immunosuppression. Here we demonstrate that in a prostate cancer model lactate released by glycolytic cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) acts on CD4+ T cells, shaping T-cell polarization. In particular, CAFs exposure (i) reduces the percentage of the antitumoral Th1 subset, inducing a lactate-dependent, SIRT1-mediated deacetylation/degradation of T-bet transcription factor; (ii) increases Treg cells, driving naive T cells polarization, through a lactate-based NF-kB activation and FoxP3 expression. In turn, this metabolic-based CAF-immunomodulated environment exerts a pro-invasive effect on prostate cancer cells, by activating a previously unexplored miR21/TLR8 axis that sustains cancer malignancy.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- long non coding rna
- transcription factor
- cell proliferation
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- toll like receptor
- inflammatory response
- long noncoding rna
- induced apoptosis
- immune response
- cell therapy
- oxidative stress
- radical prostatectomy
- regulatory t cells
- papillary thyroid
- cell cycle arrest
- lps induced
- stem cells
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- squamous cell carcinoma
- sensitive detection
- anti inflammatory
- pi k akt
- binding protein
- dendritic cells
- dna binding
- lymph node metastasis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death