Department of Anesthesiology, Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
Shanghai Key Laboratory of Perioperative Stress and Protection, Shanghai, China.
Cancer Res. 2023 Nov 1;83(21):3529-3543. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-0323.
As a safe, feasible, and inexpensive dietary intervention, fasting-mimicking diet (FMD) exhibits excellent antitumor efficacy by regulating metabolism and boosting antitumor immunity. A better understanding of the specific mechanisms underlying the immunoregulatory functions of FMD could help improve and expand the clinical application of FMD-mediated immunotherapeutic strategies. In this study, we aimed to elucidate the role of metabolic reprogramming induced by FMD in activation of antitumor immunity against colorectal cancer. Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of intratumoral immune cells revealed that tumor-infiltrating IgA+ B cells were significantly reduced by FMD treatment, leading to the activation of antitumor immunity and tumor regression in murine colorectal cancer models. Mechanistically, FMD delayed tumor growth by repressing B-cell class switching to IgA. Therefore, FMD-induced reduction of IgA+ B cells overcame the suppression of CD8+ T cells. The immunoregulatory and antitumor effects of FMD intervention were reversed by IgA+ B-cell transfer. Moreover, FMD boosted fatty acid oxidation (FAO) to trigger RUNX3 acetylation, thus inactivating Cα gene transcription and IgA class switching. IgA+ B-cell expansion was also impeded in patients placed on FMD, while B-cell expression of carnitine palmitoyl transferase 1A (CPT1A), the rate-limiting enzyme of FAO, was increased. Furthermore, CPT1A expression was negatively correlated with both IgA+ B cells and IgA secretion within colorectal cancer. Together, these results highlight that FMD holds great promise for treating colorectal cancer. Furthermore, the degree of IgA+ B cell infiltration and FAO-associated metabolic status are potential biomarkers for evaluating FMD efficacy.
Metabolic reprogramming of B cells induced by fasting-mimicking diet suppresses IgA class switching and production to activate antitumor immunity and inhibit tumor growth. See related commentary by Bush and Perry, p. 3493.
作为一种安全、可行且廉价的饮食干预方式,间歇性禁食模拟饮食(FMD)通过调节代谢和增强抗肿瘤免疫来发挥出色的抗肿瘤疗效。更好地了解 FMD 免疫调节功能的具体机制,有助于改善和扩展 FMD 介导的免疫治疗策略的临床应用。在这项研究中,我们旨在阐明 FMD 诱导的代谢重编程在激活针对结直肠癌的抗肿瘤免疫中的作用。对肿瘤内免疫细胞的单细胞 RNA 测序分析显示,FMD 治疗显著减少了肿瘤浸润性 IgA+B 细胞,导致小鼠结直肠癌模型中的肿瘤激活抗肿瘤免疫和肿瘤消退。从机制上讲,FMD 通过抑制 B 细胞向 IgA 的类别转换来抑制肿瘤生长。因此,FMD 诱导的 IgA+B 细胞减少克服了对 CD8+T 细胞的抑制。IgA+B 细胞转移逆转了 FMD 干预的免疫调节和抗肿瘤作用。此外,FMD 促进脂肪酸氧化(FAO)以触发 RUNX3 乙酰化,从而使 Cα 基因转录和 IgA 类别转换失活。在接受 FMD 治疗的患者中,IgA+B 细胞也受到了抑制,而 B 细胞中肉碱棕榈酰转移酶 1A(CPT1A)的表达增加,CPT1A 是 FAO 的限速酶。此外,CPT1A 表达与结直肠癌中的 IgA+B 细胞和 IgA 分泌均呈负相关。总之,这些结果表明 FMD 有望用于治疗结直肠癌。此外,IgA+B 细胞浸润程度和与 FAO 相关的代谢状态是评估 FMD 疗效的潜在生物标志物。
间歇性禁食模拟饮食诱导的 B 细胞代谢重编程抑制 IgA 类别转换和产生,以激活抗肿瘤免疫并抑制肿瘤生长。见 Bush 和 Perry 的相关评论,第 3493 页。