| Literature DB >> 33320838 |
Gladys Ferrere1, Maryam Tidjani Alou1, Peng Liu2, Anne-Gaëlle Goubet1, Marine Fidelle1, Oliver Kepp2, Sylvère Durand2, Valerio Iebba3, Aurélie Fluckiger1, Romain Daillère4, Cassandra Thelemaque1, Claudia Grajeda-Iglesias1, Carolina Alves Costa Silva1, Fanny Aprahamian2, Déborah Lefevre2, Liwei Zhao2, Bernhard Ryffel5, Emeline Colomba6, Monica Arnedos6, Damien Drubay7, Conrad Rauber1, Didier Raoult8, Francesco Asnicar9, Tim Spector10, Nicola Segata9, Lisa Derosa1, Guido Kroemer2, Laurence Zitvogel1,11,12.
Abstract
Limited experimental evidence bridges nutrition and cancer immunosurveillance. Here, we show that ketogenic diet (KD) - or its principal ketone body, 3-hydroxybutyrate (3HB), most specifically in intermittent scheduling - induced T cell-dependent tumor growth retardation of aggressive tumor models. In conditions in which anti-PD-1 alone or in combination with anti-CTLA-4 failed to reduce tumor growth in mice receiving a standard diet, KD, or oral supplementation of 3HB reestablished therapeutic responses. Supplementation of KD with sucrose (which breaks ketogenesis, abolishing 3HB production) or with a pharmacological antagonist of the 3HB receptor GPR109A abolished the antitumor effects. Mechanistically, 3HB prevented the immune checkpoint blockade-linked upregulation of PD-L1 on myeloid cells, while favoring the expansion of CXCR3+ T cells. KD induced compositional changes of the gut microbiota, with distinct species such as Eisenbergiella massiliensis commonly emerging in mice and humans subjected to carbohydrate-low diet interventions and highly correlating with serum concentrations of 3HB. Altogether, these results demonstrate that KD induces a 3HB-mediated antineoplastic effect that relies on T cell-mediated cancer immunosurveillance.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Immunotherapy; Metabolism; Mouse models; Oncology
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33320838 PMCID: PMC7934884 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.145207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708