4.8 Article

Reprogramming lipid metabolism prevents effector T cell senescence and enhances tumor immunotherapy

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 13, Issue 587, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz6314

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Melanoma Research Alliance
  2. NIH [CA184379, CA242188, CA237149, AG067441]
  3. Lipidomic core grant [S10OD025246]

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The functional state of T cells is critical for effective antitumor immunity. T cell senescence driven by malignant tumor cells and regulatory T cells is a common feature in cancers, characterized by unbalanced lipid metabolism and accumulation of lipid droplets. Inhibition of group IVA phospholipase A(2) can reprogram effector T cell lipid metabolism, prevent T cell senescence, and enhance antitumor immunity and immunotherapy efficacy.
The functional state of T cells is a key determinant for effective antitumor immunity and immunotherapy. Cellular metabolism, including lipid metabolism, controls T cell differentiation, survival, and effector functions. Here, we report that development of T cell senescence driven by both malignant tumor cells and regulatory T cells is a general feature in cancers. Senescent T cells have active glucose metabolism but exhibit unbalanced lipid metabolism. This unbalanced lipid metabolism results in changes of expression of lipid metabolic enzymes, which, in turn, alters lipid species and accumulation of lipid droplets in T cells. Tumor cells and Treg cells drove elevated expression of group IVA phospholipase A(2), which, in turn, was responsible for the altered lipid metabolism and senescence induction observed in T cells. Mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling and signal transducer and activator of transcription signaling coordinately control lipid metabolism and group IVA phospholipase A(2) activity in responder T cells during T cell senescence. Inhibition of group IVA phospholipase A(2) reprogrammed effector T cell lipid metabolism, prevented T cell senescence in vitro, and enhanced antitumor immunity and immunotherapy efficacy in mouse models of melanoma and breast cancer in vivo. Together, these findings identify mechanistic links between T cell senescence and regulation of lipid metabolism in the tumor microenvironment and provide a new target for tumor immunotherapy.

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