O'Connell Fiona, Mylod Eimear, Donlon Noel E, Davern Maria, Butler Christine, O'Connor Niamh, Menon Meghana S, Donohoe Claire L, Ravi Narayanasamy, Doherty Derek G, Dunne Margaret R, Reynolds John V, Roche Helen M, O'Sullivan Jacintha
Department of Surgery, Trinity St. James's Cancer Institute and Trinity Translational Medicine Institute, St. James's Hospital and Trinity College Dublin, D08 W9RT Dublin, Ireland.
Department of Surgery, Trinity St. James's Cancer Institute and Trinity Translational Medicine Institute, St. James's Hospital and Trinity College Dublin, D08 W9RT Dublin, Ireland; Cancer Immunology and Immunotherapy Group, Department of Surgery, Trinity College Dublin, St. James's Hospital, D08 W9RT Dublin, Ireland.
Transl Oncol. 2025 Mar;53:102302. doi: 10.1016/j.tranon.2025.102302. Epub 2025 Feb 17.
Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) is a poor prognosis cancer with limited responses to standard of care treatments including chemotherapy and chemoradiotherapy. OAC has one of the strongest associations with obesity, its anatomical location surrounded by visceral adipose tissue has been postulated to intensify this association. Adipose tissue is a regulatory organ with many unknown downstream functions, including its direct response to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. To elucidate the role of visceral adipose tissue in this disease state, metabolic and secreted pro-inflammatory cytokines analysis was conducted on human ex-vivo adipose tissue explants following exposure to FLOT-chemotherapy and CROSS-chemoradiotherapy. To assess how these complex treated microenvironments impact cancer cell metabolism, dendritic cell, and macrophage phenotype, mitochondrial bioenergetics and surface markers expression were examined using seahorse technology and flow cytometry respectively. This study observed that chemotherapy and chemoradiotherapy differentially alter adipose tissue metabolism and secretome, with chemoradiotherapy increasing pro-inflammatory associated mediators (p<0.05). The chemoradiotherapy-treated adipose secretome increased cancer cell spare respiratory capacity and dendritic cell adhesion markers (p<0.05). In contrast, the chemotherapy-treated adipose microenvironment enhanced mitochondrial dysfunction in cancer cells, increasing their reliance on glycolysis and enhancing pro-inflammatory marker expression on LPS-primed macrophages (p<0.05). This study for the first time demonstrates how adipose tissue, and its microenvironment can be significantly impacted by chemotherapy and chemoradiotherapy. These alterations in the adipose secretome in response to therapeutic regimens elicited distinct effects on immune cell phenotype and cancer cells metabolism, raising the question, does the wider tumour microenvironment including the adipose milieu mitigate the efficacy of current treatments.
食管腺癌(OAC)是一种预后较差的癌症,对包括化疗和放化疗在内的标准治疗反应有限。OAC与肥胖的关联最为紧密,据推测其被内脏脂肪组织包围的解剖位置加剧了这种关联。脂肪组织是一个具有许多未知下游功能的调节器官,包括其对化疗和放疗的直接反应。为了阐明内脏脂肪组织在这种疾病状态中的作用,对暴露于FLOT化疗和CROSS放化疗后的人离体脂肪组织外植体进行了代谢和分泌性促炎细胞因子分析。为了评估这些复杂的处理微环境如何影响癌细胞代谢、树突状细胞和巨噬细胞表型,分别使用海马技术和流式细胞术检测了线粒体生物能量学和表面标志物表达。本研究观察到化疗和放化疗对脂肪组织代谢和分泌组有不同的影响,放化疗增加了促炎相关介质(p<0.05)。放化疗处理后的脂肪分泌组增加了癌细胞的备用呼吸能力和树突状细胞粘附标志物(p<0.05)。相比之下,化疗处理后的脂肪微环境增强了癌细胞中的线粒体功能障碍,增加了它们对糖酵解的依赖,并增强了脂多糖预处理巨噬细胞上的促炎标志物表达(p<0.05)。本研究首次证明了脂肪组织及其微环境如何受到化疗和放化疗的显著影响。脂肪分泌组对治疗方案的这些改变对免疫细胞表型和癌细胞代谢产生了不同的影响,这就提出了一个问题,包括脂肪环境在内的更广泛的肿瘤微环境是否会降低当前治疗的疗效。