Environmental eustress modulates β-ARs/CCL2 axis to induce anti-tumor immunity and sensitize immunotherapy against liver cancer in mice

Although psycho-social stress is a well-known factor that contributes to the development of cancer, it remains largely unclear whether and how environmental eustress influences malignant diseases and regulates cancer-related therapeutic responses. Using an established eustress model, we demonstrate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2021-09, Vol.12 (1), p.5725-5725, Article 5725
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Chaobao, Yang, Yang, Chen, Cheng, Li, Ling, Li, Jingquan, Wang, Xiaonan, Chu, Qiao, Qiu, Lin, Ba, Qian, Li, Xiaoguang, Wang, Hui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although psycho-social stress is a well-known factor that contributes to the development of cancer, it remains largely unclear whether and how environmental eustress influences malignant diseases and regulates cancer-related therapeutic responses. Using an established eustress model, we demonstrate that mice living in an enriched environment (EE) are protected from carcinogen-induced liver neoplasia and transplantable syngeneic liver tumors, owning to a CD8 + T cell-dependent tumor control. We identify a peripheral Neuro-Endocrine-Immune pathway in eustress, including Sympathetic nervous system (SNS)/β-adrenergic receptors (β-ARs)/CCL2 that relieves tumor immunosuppression and overcomes PD-L1 resistance to immunotherapy. Notably, EE activates peripheral SNS and β-ARs signaling in tumor cells and tumor infiltrated myeloid cells, leading to suppression of CCL2 expression and activation of anti-tumor immunity. Either blockade of CCL2/CCR2 or β-AR signaling in EE mice lose the tumor protection capability. Our study reveales that environmental eustress via EE stimulates anti-tumor immunity, resulting in more efficient tumor control and a better outcome of immunotherapy. The impact of positive environment stimulations (eustress) on cancer biology remains poorly understood. Here the authors show that exposure to an environment enrichment stimulates anti-tumor immunity and reduces tumor growth in preclinical models of liver cancer.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-25967-9