| Literature DB >> 31501614 |
Heng Yang1,2, Lin Xia1,2, Jian Chen3, Guido Kroemer4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12, Yuting Ma13,14, Shuqing Zhang1,2, Vincent Martin15, Qingqing Li1,2, Shangqing Lin1,2, Jinfeng Chen1,2, Joseph Calmette16, Min Lu17, Lingyi Fu18, Jie Yang18, Zhizhong Pan18, Kuai Yu18, Jingjing He18, Eric Morand19, Géraldine Schlecht-Louf16, Roman Krzysiek16,20, Laurence Zitvogel1,2,21,22,23, Boxi Kang24, Zeming Zhang24, Andrew Leader25, Penghui Zhou18, Laurence Lanfumey15, Minxin Shi3.
Abstract
Psychological distress has long been suspected to influence cancer incidence and mortality. It remains largely unknown whether and how stress affects the efficacy of anticancer therapies. We observed that social defeat caused anxiety-like behaviors in mice and dampened therapeutic responses against carcinogen-induced neoplasias and transplantable tumors. Stress elevated plasma corticosterone and upregulated the expression of glucocorticoid-inducible factor Tsc22d3, which blocked type I interferon (IFN) responses in dendritic cell (DC) and IFN-γ+ T cell activation. Similarly, close correlations were discovered among plasma cortisol levels, TSC22D3 expression in circulating leukocytes and negative mood in patients with cancer. In murine models, exogenous glucocorticoid injection, or enforced expression of Tsc22d3 in DC was sufficient to abolish therapeutic control of tumors. Administration of a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist or DC-specific Tsc22d3 deletion reversed the negative impact of stress or glucocorticoid supplementation on therapeutic outcomes. Altogether, these results indicate that stress-induced glucocorticoid surge and Tsc22d3 upregulation can subvert therapy-induced anticancer immunosurveillance.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31501614 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0566-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440