Cucchi Danilo, Camacho-Muñoz Dolores, Certo Michelangelo, Pucino Valentina, Nicolaou Anna, Mauro Claudio
Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, Charterhouse Square, London EC1M 6BQ, UK.
Laboratory for Lipidomics and Lipid Biology, Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, School of Health sciences, The University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PT, UK.
Cell Stress. 2019 Dec 10;4(1):9-23. doi: 10.15698/cst2020.01.209.
Recent advances in immunology and cancer research show that fatty acids, their metabolism and their sensing have a crucial role in the biology of many different cell types. Indeed, they are able to affect cellular behaviour with great implications for pathophysiology. Both the catabolic and anabolic pathways of fatty acids present us with a number of enzymes, receptors and agonists/antagonists that are potential therapeutic targets, some of which have already been successfully pursued. Fatty acids can affect the differentiation of immune cells, particularly T cells, as well as their activation and function, with important consequences for the balance between anti- and pro-inflammatory signals in immune diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, diabetes, obesity and cardiovascular conditions. In the context of cancer biology, fatty acids mainly provide substrates for energy production, which is of crucial importance to meet the energy demands of these highly proliferating cells. Fatty acids can also be involved in a broader transcriptional programme as they trigger signals necessary for tumorigenesis and can confer to cancer cells the ability to migrate and generate distant metastasis. For these reasons, the study of fatty acids represents a new research direction that can generate detailed insight and provide novel tools for the understanding of immune and cancer cell biology, and, more importantly, support the development of novel, efficient and fine-tuned clinical interventions. Here, we review the recent literature focusing on the involvement of fatty acids in the biology of immune cells, with emphasis on T cells, and cancer cells, from sensing and binding, to metabolism and downstream effects in cell signalling.
免疫学和癌症研究的最新进展表明,脂肪酸、其代谢过程及其感知机制在许多不同细胞类型的生物学过程中起着关键作用。事实上,它们能够影响细胞行为,对病理生理学具有重大影响。脂肪酸的分解代谢和合成代谢途径为我们提供了许多酶、受体和激动剂/拮抗剂,这些都是潜在的治疗靶点,其中一些已经得到了成功的研究。脂肪酸可以影响免疫细胞尤其是T细胞的分化,以及它们的激活和功能,这对免疫疾病(如类风湿性关节炎、银屑病、糖尿病、肥胖症和心血管疾病)中抗炎信号和促炎信号之间的平衡具有重要影响。在癌症生物学背景下,脂肪酸主要为能量产生提供底物,这对于满足这些高度增殖细胞的能量需求至关重要。脂肪酸还可以参与更广泛的转录程序,因为它们触发肿瘤发生所需的信号,并能赋予癌细胞迁移和产生远处转移的能力。基于这些原因,对脂肪酸的研究代表了一个新的研究方向,它可以产生详细的见解,并为理解免疫和癌细胞生物学提供新工具,更重要的是,支持新型、高效且精准的临床干预措施的开发。在此,我们综述了近期的文献,重点关注脂肪酸在免疫细胞(尤其是T细胞)和癌细胞生物学中的作用,从感知和结合到代谢以及细胞信号传导中的下游效应。