Dual impacts of serine/glycine-free diet in enhancing antitumor immunity and promoting evasion via PD-L1 lactylation

Huan Tong(Sichuan University), Z. X. Jiang(Sichuan University), Linlin Song(Sichuan University), Keqin Tan(Sichuan University), Xiaomeng Yin(Sichuan University), Changtong He(The Recovery Center), Juan Huang(University of Electronic Science and Technology of China), Xiaoyue Li(Sichuan University), Xiaofan Jing(Sichuan University), Yun Hong(Sichuan University), Guangqi Li(Sichuan University), Yunuo Zhao(Sichuan University), Qianlong Kang(Sichuan University), Yuhao Wei(Sichuan University), Renwei Li(Sichuan University), Zhiwen Long(The Recovery Center), Jun Yin(The Recovery Center), Qiang Luo(Sichuan Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Xiao Liang(Sichuan University), Yi Wan(Sichuan University), Aiping Zheng(Sichuan University), Nan Lin(Sichuan University), Tao Zhang(Sichuan University), Jiayi Xu(Sichuan University), Xinggang Yang(Sichuan University), Yuting Jiang(Sichuan University), Yueyi Li(Sichuan University), Xiang Yu(Sichuan University), Yu Zhang(Sichuan University), Lusi Feng(Sichuan University), Zhen Lei(Rusk Rehabilitation), Hubing Shi(Sichuan University), Xuelei Ma(Sichuan University)
Cell Metabolism
November 21, 2024
Cited by 120Open Access
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Abstract

The effect of the serine/glycine-free diet (-SG diet) on colorectal cancer (CRC) remains unclear; meanwhile, programmed death-1 (PD-1) inhibitors are less effective for most CRC patients. Here, we demonstrate that the -SG diet inhibits CRC growth and promotes the accumulation of cytotoxic T cells to enhance antitumor immunity. Additionally, we also identified the lactylation of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in tumor cells as a mechanism of immune evasion during cytotoxic T cell-mediated antitumor responses, and blocking the PD-1/PD-L1 signaling pathway is able to rejuvenate the function of CD8+ T cells recruited by the -SG diet, indicating the potential of combining the -SG diet with immunotherapy. We conducted a single-arm, phase I study (ChiCTR2300067929). The primary outcome suggests that the -SG diet is feasible and safe for regulating systemic immunity. Secondary outcomes include patient tolerability and potential antitumor effects. Collectively, our findings highlight the promising therapeutic potential of the -SG diet for treating solid tumors.


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