Monoacylglycerol lipase regulates cannabinoid receptor 2-dependent macrophage activation and cancer progression

Wei Xiang(Army Medical University), Rongchen Shi(Army Medical University), Xia Kang(Army Medical University), Xuan Zhang(Army Medical University), Peng Chen, Lili Zhang(Army Medical University), Along Hou(Army Medical University), Rui Wang(Army Medical University), Yuanyin Zhao(Army Medical University), Kun Zhao(Army Medical University), Yingzhe Liu(Army Medical University), Yue Ma(Army Medical University), Huan Luo(Army Medical University), Shenglan Shang(Army Medical University), Jinyu Zhang(Army Medical University), Fengtian He(Army Medical University), Songtao Yu(Army Medical University), Lixia Gan(Army Medical University), Chunmeng Shi(Army Medical University), Yongsheng Li(Army Medical University), Wei Yang(Nanfang Hospital), Houjie Liang(Army Medical University), Hongming Miao(Army Medical University)
Nature Communications
June 27, 2018
Cited by 236Open Access
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Abstract

Metabolic reprogramming greatly contributes to the regulation of macrophage activation. However, the mechanism of lipid accumulation and the corresponding function in tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) remain unclear. With primary investigation in colon cancer and confirmation in other cancer models, here we determine that deficiency of monoacylglycerol lipase (MGLL) results in lipid overload in TAMs. Functionally, macrophage MGLL inhibits CB2 cannabinoid receptor-dependent tumor progression in inoculated and genetic cancer models. Mechanistically, MGLL deficiency promotes CB2/TLR4-dependent macrophage activation, which further suppresses the function of tumor-associated CD8+ T cells. Treatment with CB2 antagonists delays tumor progression in inoculated and genetic cancer models. Finally, we verify that expression of macrophage MGLL is decreased in cancer tissues and positively correlated with the survival of cancer patients. Taken together, our findings identify MGLL as a switch for CB2/TLR4-dependent macrophage activation and provide potential targets for cancer therapy.


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