Creatine uptake regulates CD8 T cell antitumor immunity

Stefano Di Biase(University of California, Los Angeles), Xiaoya Ma(University of California, Los Angeles), Xi Wang(University of California, Los Angeles), Jiaji Yu(University of California, Los Angeles), Yu-Chen Wang(University of California, Los Angeles), Drake J. Smith(University of California, Los Angeles), Yang Zhou(University of California, Los Angeles), Zhe Li(University of California, Los Angeles), Kwang Gi Kim(University of California, Los Angeles), Nicole Clarke(University of California, Los Angeles), Angela To(University of California, Los Angeles), Lili Yang(University of California, Los Angeles)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
October 18, 2019
Cited by 126Open Access
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Abstract

T cells demand massive energy to combat cancer; however, the metabolic regulators controlling antitumor T cell immunity have just begun to be unveiled. When studying nutrient usage of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in mice, we detected a sharp increase of the expression of a CrT (Slc6a8) gene, which encodes a surface transporter controlling the uptake of creatine into a cell. Using CrT knockout mice, we showed that creatine uptake deficiency severely impaired antitumor T cell immunity. Supplementing creatine to WT mice significantly suppressed tumor growth in multiple mouse tumor models, and the combination of creatine supplementation with a PD-1/PD-L1 blockade treatment showed synergistic tumor suppression efficacy. We further demonstrated that creatine acts as a “molecular battery” conserving bioenergy to power T cell activities. Therefore, our results have identified creatine as an important metabolic regulator controlling antitumor T cell immunity, underscoring the potential of creatine supplementation to improve T cell–based cancer immunotherapies.


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