Tumour extracellular vesicles and particles induce liver metabolic dysfunction

Gang Wang(Cornell University), Jianlong Li(Cornell University), Linda Bojmar(Linköping University), Haiyan Chen(Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China), Zhong Li(Duke University), Gabriel Cardial Tobias(Cornell University), Mengying Hu(Cornell University), Edwin A. Homan(Cornell University), Serena Lucotti(Cornell University), Fengbo Zhao(Nantong University), Valentina Posada(The Ohio State University), Peter R. Oxley(Cornell University), Michele Cioffi(Cornell University), Han Sang Kim(Yonsei University), Huajuan Wang(Cornell University), Pernille Lauritzen(Cornell University), Nancy Boudreau(Cornell University), Zhanjun Shi(Nanfang Hospital), Christin E. Burd(The Ohio State University), Jonathan H. Zippin(Cornell University), James C. Lo(Cornell University), Geoffrey S. Pitt(Cornell University), Jonathan M. Hernandez(National Institutes of Health), Constantinos P. Zambirinis(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Michael A. Hollingsworth(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Paul M. Grandgenett(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Maneesh Jain(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Surinder K. Batra(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Dominick J. DiMaio(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Jean L. Grem(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Kelsey Klute(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Tanya Trippett(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Mikala Egeblad(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Doru Paul(Cornell University), Jacqueline Bromberg(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), David P. Kelsen(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Vinagolu K. Rajasekhar(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), John H. Healey(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Irina Matei(Cornell University), William R. Jarnagin(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Robert E. Schwartz(Cornell University), Haiying Zhang(Cornell University), David Lyden(Cornell University)
Nature
May 24, 2023
Cited by 256Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer alters the function of multiple organs beyond those targeted by metastasis1,2. Here we show that inflammation, fatty liver and dysregulated metabolism are hallmarks of systemically affected livers in mouse models and in patients with extrahepatic metastasis. We identified tumour-derived extracellular vesicles and particles (EVPs) as crucial mediators of cancer-induced hepatic reprogramming, which could be reversed by reducing tumour EVP secretion via depletion of Rab27a. All EVP subpopulations, exosomes and principally exomeres, could dysregulate hepatic function. The fatty acid cargo of tumour EVPs—particularly palmitic acid—induced secretion of tumour necrosis factor (TNF) by Kupffer cells, generating a pro-inflammatory microenvironment, suppressing fatty acid metabolism and oxidative phosphorylation, and promoting fatty liver formation. Notably, Kupffer cell ablation or TNF blockade markedly decreased tumour-induced fatty liver generation. Tumour implantation or pre-treatment with tumour EVPs diminished cytochrome P450 gene expression and attenuated drug metabolism in a TNF-dependent manner. We also observed fatty liver and decreased cytochrome P450 expression at diagnosis in tumour-free livers of patients with pancreatic cancer who later developed extrahepatic metastasis, highlighting the clinical relevance of our findings. Notably, tumour EVP education enhanced side effects of chemotherapy, including bone marrow suppression and cardiotoxicity, suggesting that metabolic reprogramming of the liver by tumour-derived EVPs may limit chemotherapy tolerance in patients with cancer. Our results reveal how tumour-derived EVPs dysregulate hepatic function and their targetable potential, alongside TNF inhibition, for preventing fatty liver formation and enhancing the efficacy of chemotherapy. Remote tumours cause liver dysfunction by releasing extracellular vesicles and particles containing palmitic acid, which induces TNF signalling in Kupffer cells, resulting in inflammation, fatty deposits and metabolic dysregulation, thus both reducing the efficacy and increasing the toxicity of chemotherapies.


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