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A Ludwig Cancer Research study has discovered that the immune systemโ€™s surveillance of cancer can itself induce metabolic adaptations in the cells of early-stage tumors that simultaneously promote their growth and equip them to suppress lethal immune responses.

Led by Ludwig Lausanne Associate Member Ping-Chih Ho and published in Cell Metabolism, the study details the precise mechanism by which this โ€œimmunometabolic editingโ€ of emergent tumors occurs in mouse models of the skin cancer melanoma and identifies a novel biochemical signaling cascade and proteins that orchestrate its effects. Aside from illuminating a previously unknown dimension of tumor evolution, the findings hold significant promise for improving the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy.

โ€œWe have uncovered dozens of metabolic enzymes that contribute to immune evasion in melanoma tumors,โ€ said Ho. โ€œThese enzymes, as well as some of the individual components of the signaling pathway weโ€™ve identified, represent a rich trove of potential drug targets to undermine the defenses erected by immunometabolic editing. Such drugs could make tumors vulnerable to immune clearance and could also be used in combination with checkpoint blockade and other immunotherapies to overcome the resistance most cancers have to such treatments.โ€


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The immune systemโ€™s surveillance of cancers is thought to contribute to malignancy by driving the evolution of cancer cells that can undermine the machinery of immune detection and attack. This theory of โ€œimmunoeditingโ€โ€”developed most notably by the former Scientific Director and CEO of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, the late Lloyd Old, and Ludwigโ€™s current Scientific Advisory Committee member Robert Schreiberโ€”is now a fundamental principle of tumor immunology.

Researchers have also long known that the metabolic adaptations common to cancer cellsโ€”such as their avid consumption of the sugar glucoseโ€”undermine anti-tumor immune responses. What was unclear, however, was whether immune surveillance can also induce metabolic adaptations in cancer cells and whether those adaptations can additionally help them resist immune responses. This is what the current study has established, exposing a facet of tumor evolution that has been hypothesized, but has so far remained unproven.

Ho and his colleagues identify three key proteins that orchestrate this effect: IFNฮณ, STAT3 and c-Myc.  An instrument of anti-cancer surveillance, IFNฮณ is secreted by T cells and other immune cells and known to block the growth of cancer cells. But the signaling it triggers, mediated by a protein named STAT1, also induces adaptations in cancer cells that help them evade T cell attackโ€”the process known as immunoediting.

The researchers show in the current study that IFNฮณ additionally activates a distinct and little-explored signaling pathway mediated by a related protein named STAT3. This pathway alters the expression patterns of the cancer cellโ€™s genome by inducing โ€œepigeneticโ€ changes that determine which genes are active. It also hyperactivates a master regulator of cellular metabolism known as c-Myc, which is overexpressed in many cancers.

The researchers show that genes activated by c-Myc donโ€™t just shape cancer metabolism, they also compromise the infiltration of T cells into tumors and disable their attack on cancer cells. The signaling pathways mediated by STAT1 and STAT3, in fact, appear to synergize to confer on emergent tumors the critical ability to avoid immune clearance, driving the immunometabolic editing that helps power their evolution into full-blown malignancy.

โ€œPrevious studies have shown that the loss of STAT3 activity in cancer cells promotes immune infiltration and induces tumor regression,โ€ said Ho. โ€œOur findings here explain why and suggest that targeting STAT3 with a drug could restore sensitivity to IFNฮณ in cancer cells that have evolved beyond its inhibitory reach.โ€

The researchers also used CRISPR genome editing to screen 2,078 metabolic enzymes in the tumors of mice and identified 40 metabolic genes controlled by c-Myc that play an important role in helping cancer cells evade immune surveillance and attack. These enzymes too are prime candidates for drug targeting.

โ€œAside from its pharmacologic implications,โ€ says Ho, โ€œthis study exposes a previously unappreciated dimension of immunoediting that will influence our understanding of the metabolic crosstalk between cancer cells and immune cells in the tumor microenvironment.โ€

IMAGE CREDIT: Ludwig Cancer Research


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