Mild dyslipidemia accelerates tumorigenesis through expansion of Ly6C hi monocytes and differentiation to pro-angiogenic myeloid cells

Cancer and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share common risk factors such as dyslipidemia, obesity and inflammation. However, the role of pro-atherogenic environment and its associated low-grade inflammation in tumor progression remains underexplored. Here we show that feeding C57BL/6J mice with a non-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-09, Vol.13 (1), p.5399
Hauptverfasser: Tran, Thi, Lavillegrand, Jean-Remi, Lereverend, Cedric, Esposito, Bruno, Cartier, Lucille, Montabord, Melanie, Tran-Rajau, Jaouen, Diedisheim, Marc, Gruel, Nadège, Ouguerram, Khadija, Paolini, Lea, Lenoir, Olivia, Pinteaux, Emmanuel, Brabencova, Eva, Tanchot, Corinne, Urquia, Pauline, Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline, Le Naour, Richard, Merrouche, Yacine, Stockmann, Christian, Mallat, Ziad, Tedgui, Alain, Ait-Oufella, Hafid, Tartour, Eric, Potteaux, Stephane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cancer and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share common risk factors such as dyslipidemia, obesity and inflammation. However, the role of pro-atherogenic environment and its associated low-grade inflammation in tumor progression remains underexplored. Here we show that feeding C57BL/6J mice with a non-obesogenic high fat high cholesterol diet (HFHCD) for two weeks to induce mild dyslipidemia, increases the pool of circulating Ly6C monocytes available for initial melanoma development, in an IL-1β-dependent manner. Descendants of circulating myeloid cells, which accumulate in the tumor microenvironment of mice under HFHCD, heighten pro-angiogenic and immunosuppressive activities locally. Limiting myeloid cell accumulation or targeting VEGF-A production by myeloid cells decrease HFHCD-induced tumor growth acceleration. Reverting the HFHCD to a chow diet at the time of tumor implantation protects against tumor growth. Together, these data shed light on cross-disease communication between cardiovascular pathologies and cancer.
ISSN:2041-1723