| Literature DB >> 34266895 |
Feifei Xu1, Zining Wang1, Hongxia Zhang1, Jiemin Chen1, Xiaojuan Wang1, Lei Cui1, Chunyuan Xie1, Mengyun Li1,2,3, Fang Wang4, Penghui Zhou1, Jinyun Liu1, Peng Huang1, Xiaodong Xia5,3, Xiaojun Xia6.
Abstract
Hyperactive mevalonate (MVA) metabolic activity is often observed in cancer cells, and blockade of this pathway inhibits tumor cell lipid synthesis and cell growth and enhances tumor immunogenicity. How tumor cell MVA metabolic blockade promotes antitumor immune responses, however, remains unclear. Here we show that inhibition of the MVA metabolic pathway in tumor cells elicits type 1 classical dendritic cells (cDC1)-mediated tumor recognition and antigen cross-presentation for antitumor immunity. Mechanistically, MVA blockade disrupted prenylation of the small GTPase Rac1 and induced cancer cell actin filament exposure, which was recognized by CLEC9A, a C-lectin receptor specifically expressed on cDC1s, in turn activating antitumor T cells. MVA pathway blockade or Rac1 knockdown in tumor cells induced CD8+ T-cell-mediated antitumor immunity in immunocompetent mice but not in Batf3 -/- mice lacking CLEC9A+ dendritic cells. These findings demonstrate tumor MVA metabolic blockade stimulates a cDC1 response through CLEC9A-mediated immune recognition of tumor cell cytoskeleton, illustrating a new immune surveillance mechanism by which dendritic cells monitor tumor metabolic dysregulation and providing insight into how MVA pathway inhibition may potentiate anticancer immunity. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings suggest that mevalonate blockade in cancer cells disrupts Rac1 prenylation to increase recognition and cross-presentation by conventional dendritic cells, suggesting this axis as a potential target for cancer immunotherapy. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34266895 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-20-3977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701