Metabolic Dysregulation Explains the Diverse Impacts of Obesity in Males and Females with Gastrointestinal Cancers

The prevalence of obesity, defined as the body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m , has reached epidemic levels. Obesity is associated with an increased risk of various cancers, including gastrointestinal ones. Recent evidence has suggested that obesity disproportionately impacts males and females with canc...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2023-06, Vol.24 (13), p.10847
Hauptverfasser: Rosario, Spencer R, Dong, Bowen, Zhang, Yali, Hsiao, Hua-Hsin, Isenhart, Emily, Wang, Jianmin, Siegel, Erin M, Monjazeb, Arta M, Owen, Dwight H, Dey, Prasenjit, Tabung, Fred K, Spakowicz, Daniel J, Murphy, William J, Edge, Stephen, Yendamuri, Sai, Ibrahimi, Sami, Kolesar, Jill M, McDonald, Patsy H, Vadehra, Deepak, Churchman, Michelle, Liu, Song, Kalinski, Pawel, Mukherjee, Sarbajit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The prevalence of obesity, defined as the body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m , has reached epidemic levels. Obesity is associated with an increased risk of various cancers, including gastrointestinal ones. Recent evidence has suggested that obesity disproportionately impacts males and females with cancer, resulting in varied transcriptional and metabolic dysregulation. This study aimed to elucidate the differences in the metabolic milieu of adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract both related and unrelated to sex in obesity. To demonstrate these obesity and sex-related effects, we utilized three primary data sources: serum metabolomics from obese and non-obese patients assessed via the Biocrates MxP Quant 500 mass spectrometry-based kit, the ORIEN tumor RNA-sequencing data for all adenocarcinoma cases to assess the impacts of obesity, and publicly available TCGA transcriptional analysis to assess GI cancers and sex-related differences in GI cancers specifically. We applied and integrated our unique transcriptional metabolic pipeline in combination with our metabolomics data to reveal how obesity and sex can dictate differential metabolism in patients. Differentially expressed genes (DEG) analysis of ORIEN obese adenocarcinoma as compared to normal-weight adenocarcinoma patients resulted in large-scale transcriptional reprogramming (4029 DEGs, adj. < 0.05 and |logFC| > 0.58). Gene Set Enrichment and metabolic pipeline analysis showed genes enriched for pathways relating to immunity (inflammation, and CD40 signaling, among others) and metabolism. Specifically, we found alterations to steroid metabolism and tryptophan/kynurenine metabolism in obese patients, both of which are highly associated with disease severity and immune cell dysfunction. These findings were further confirmed using the TCGA colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRC) and esophageal adenocarcinoma (ESCA) data, which showed similar patterns of increased tryptophan catabolism for kynurenine production in obese patients. These patients further showed disparate alterations between males and females when comparing obese to non-obese patient populations. Alterations to immune and metabolic pathways were validated in six patients (two obese and four normal weight) via CD8+/CD4+ peripheral blood mononuclear cell RNA-sequencing and paired serum metabolomics, which showed differential kynurenine and lipid metabolism, which corresponded with altered T-cell transcriptome in obese populations. Overall, ob
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms241310847