Department of Pathology, Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York.
Cancer Res. 2024 Aug 15;84(16):2645-2659. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-1788.
Serine is critical for supporting cancer metabolism, and depriving malignant cells of this nonessential amino acid exerts antineoplastic effects, in large part, through disrupting metabolic pathways. Given the intricate relationship between cancer metabolism and the immune system, the metabolic defects imposed by serine deprivation might impact tumor-targeting immunity. In this study, we demonstrated that restricting endogenous and exogenous sources of serine in colorectal cancer cells results in mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) accumulation in the cytosol and consequent cGAS-STING1-driven type I IFN secretion. Depleting mtDNA or blocking its release attenuated cGAS-STING1 activation during serine deprivation. In vivo studies revealed that serine deprivation limits tumor growth, accompanied by enhanced type I IFN signaling and intratumoral infiltration of immune effector cells. Notably, the tumor-suppressive and immune-enhancing effects of serine restriction were impaired by T-cell depletion and IFN receptor blockade. Moreover, disrupting cGAS-STING1 signaling in colorectal cancer cells limited the immunostimulatory and tumor-suppressive effects of serine deprivation. Lastly, serine depletion increased the sensitivity of tumors to an immune checkpoint inhibitor targeting PD-1. Taken together, these findings reveal a role for serine as a suppressor of antitumor immunity, suggesting that serine deprivation may be employed to enhance tumor immunogenicity and improve responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Significance: Depriving cancer cells of serine provokes mitochondrial perturbations that induce cytosolic mitochondrial DNA accumulation and subsequent activation of cGAS-STING signaling, stimulating tumor-targeting immune responses that can be enhanced with PD-1 targeted therapy. See related commentary by Borges and Garg, p. 2569.
丝氨酸对支持癌症代谢至关重要,剥夺恶性细胞这种非必需氨基酸在很大程度上通过破坏代谢途径产生抗肿瘤作用。鉴于癌症代谢与免疫系统之间的复杂关系,丝氨酸剥夺引起的代谢缺陷可能会影响肿瘤靶向免疫。在这项研究中,我们证明了限制结直肠癌细胞内源性和外源性丝氨酸来源会导致线粒体功能障碍,导致线粒体 DNA(mtDNA)在细胞质中积累,并随后引发 cGAS-STING1 驱动的 I 型 IFN 分泌。耗尽 mtDNA 或阻止其释放可减轻丝氨酸剥夺期间 cGAS-STING1 的激活。体内研究表明,丝氨酸剥夺限制肿瘤生长,同时增强 I 型 IFN 信号和免疫效应细胞在肿瘤内的浸润。值得注意的是,T 细胞耗竭和 IFN 受体阻断会损害丝氨酸限制的肿瘤抑制和免疫增强作用。此外,破坏结直肠癌细胞中的 cGAS-STING1 信号会限制丝氨酸剥夺的免疫刺激和肿瘤抑制作用。最后,丝氨酸耗尽增加了肿瘤对针对 PD-1 的免疫检查点抑制剂的敏感性。总之,这些发现揭示了丝氨酸作为抗肿瘤免疫抑制物的作用,表明剥夺丝氨酸可能被用于增强肿瘤免疫原性并提高对免疫检查点抑制剂的反应性。意义:剥夺癌细胞丝氨酸会引起线粒体扰动,导致细胞质中 mtDNA 积累,随后激活 cGAS-STING 信号,刺激肿瘤靶向免疫反应,并用 PD-1 靶向治疗增强。见 Borges 和 Garg 的相关评论,第 2569 页。