Glutamine blockade induces divergent metabolic programs to overcome tumor immune evasion

Robert D. Leone(Bloomberg (United States)), Liang Zhao(Bloomberg (United States)), Judson M. Englert(Bloomberg (United States)), Im-Meng Sun(Bloomberg (United States)), Min Hee Oh(Bloomberg (United States)), Im‐Hong Sun(Bloomberg (United States)), Matthew L. Arwood(Bloomberg (United States)), Ian A. Bettencourt(Bloomberg (United States)), Chirag H. Patel(Bloomberg (United States)), Jiayu Wen(Bloomberg (United States)), Ada Tam(Bloomberg (United States)), Richard L. Blosser(Bloomberg (United States)), Eva Prchalová(Johns Hopkins University), Jesse Alt(Johns Hopkins University), Rana Rais(Johns Hopkins University), Barbara S. Slusher(Johns Hopkins University), Jonathan D. Powell(Bloomberg (United States))
Science
November 7, 2019
Cited by 1,143

Abstract

The metabolic characteristics of tumors present considerable hurdles to immune cell function and cancer immunotherapy. Using a glutamine antagonist, we metabolically dismantled the immunosuppressive microenvironment of tumors. We demonstrate that glutamine blockade in tumor-bearing mice suppresses oxidative and glycolytic metabolism of cancer cells, leading to decreased hypoxia, acidosis, and nutrient depletion. By contrast, effector T cells responded to glutamine antagonism by markedly up-regulating oxidative metabolism and adopting a long-lived, highly activated phenotype. These divergent changes in cellular metabolism and programming form the basis for potent antitumor responses. Glutamine antagonism therefore exposes a previously undefined difference in metabolic plasticity between cancer cells and effector T cells that can be exploited as a "metabolic checkpoint" for tumor immunotherapy.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis