| Literature DB >> 35477756 |
Oxana Dmitrieva-Posocco1, Andrea C Wong1, Patrick Lundgren1, Aleksandra M Golos1, Hélène C Descamps1, Lenka Dohnalová1, Zvi Cramer2, Yuhua Tian2, Brian Yueh3, Onur Eskiocak3, Gabor Egervari4, Yemin Lan4, Jinping Liu5,6, Jiaxin Fan7, Jihee Kim1, Bhoomi Madhu1, Kai Markus Schneider1, Svetlana Khoziainova1,8,9,10, Natalia Andreeva8,9,10, Qiaohong Wang4,11, Ning Li2, Emma E Furth12, Will Bailis13, Judith R Kelsen14, Kathryn E Hamilton14, Klaus H Kaestner5,6, Shelley L Berger4, Jonathan A Epstein4,11, Rajan Jain4,11, Mingyao Li7, Semir Beyaz3, Christopher J Lengner2, Bryson W Katona15, Sergei I Grivennikov8,9,10, Christoph A Thaiss16,17,18, Maayan Levy19,20.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is among the most frequent forms of cancer, and new strategies for its prevention and therapy are urgently needed1. Here we identify a metabolite signalling pathway that provides actionable insights towards this goal. We perform a dietary screen in autochthonous animal models of CRC and find that ketogenic diets exhibit a strong tumour-inhibitory effect. These properties of ketogenic diets are recapitulated by the ketone body β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB), which reduces the proliferation of colonic crypt cells and potently suppresses intestinal tumour growth. We find that BHB acts through the surface receptor Hcar2 and induces the transcriptional regulator Hopx, thereby altering gene expression and inhibiting cell proliferation. Cancer organoid assays and single-cell RNA sequencing of biopsies from patients with CRC provide evidence that elevated BHB levels and active HOPX are associated with reduced intestinal epithelial proliferation in humans. This study thus identifies a BHB-triggered pathway regulating intestinal tumorigenesis and indicates that oral or systemic interventions with a single metabolite may complement current prevention and treatment strategies for CRC.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35477756 PMCID: PMC9448510 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04649-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 69.504