Opzioni
Ketogenic diet and ketone bodies enhance the anticancer effects of PD-1 blockade
2021
Periodico
JCI INSIGHT
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.
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Soggetti
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Cancer
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Immunotherapy
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Metabolism
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Mouse model
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Oncology
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3-Hydroxybutyric Acid...
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Animal
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CTLA-4 Antigen
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Cell Line, Tumor
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Combined Modality The...
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Female
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Gastrointestinal Micr...
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Human
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Immune Checkpoint Inh...
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Ketone Bodie
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Kidney Neoplasm
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Melanoma, Experimenta...
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Mice
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Mice, Inbred BALB C
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Neoplasms, Experiment...
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Programmed Cell Death...
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Receptors, G-Protein-...
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Diet, Ketogenic