Lipid accumulation and dendritic cell dysfunction in cancer

DL Herber, W Cao, Y Nefedova, SV Novitskiy… - Nature medicine, 2010 - nature.com
DL Herber, W Cao, Y Nefedova, SV Novitskiy, S Nagaraj, VA Tyurin, A Corzo, HI Cho…
Nature medicine, 2010nature.com
Dendritic cells (DCs), a type of professional antigen-presenting cells, are responsible for
initiation and maintenance of immune responses. Here we report that a substantial
proportion of DCs in tumor-bearing mice and people with cancer have high amounts of
triglycerides as compared with DCs from tumor-free mice and healthy individuals. In our
studies, lipid accumulation in DCs was caused by increased uptake of extracellular lipids
due to upregulation of scavenger receptor A. DCs with high lipid content were not able to …
Abstract
Dendritic cells (DCs), a type of professional antigen-presenting cells, are responsible for initiation and maintenance of immune responses. Here we report that a substantial proportion of DCs in tumor-bearing mice and people with cancer have high amounts of triglycerides as compared with DCs from tumor-free mice and healthy individuals. In our studies, lipid accumulation in DCs was caused by increased uptake of extracellular lipids due to upregulation of scavenger receptor A. DCs with high lipid content were not able to effectively stimulate allogeneic T cells or present tumor-associated antigens. DCs with high and normal lipid levels did not differ in expression of major histocompatibility complex and co-stimulatory molecules. However, lipid-laden DCs had a reduced capacity to process antigens. Pharmacological normalization of lipid abundance in DCs with an inhibitor of acetyl-CoA carboxylase restored the functional activity of DCs and substantially enhanced the effects of cancer vaccines. These findings suggest that immune responses in cancer can be improved by manipulating the lipid levels in DCs.
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