4.7 Article

The oncogenic and clinical implications of lactate induced immunosuppression in the tumour microenvironment

Journal

CANCER LETTERS
Volume 500, Issue -, Pages 75-86

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2020.12.021

Keywords

Warburg effect; Metabolic reprogramming; Immune evasion; Oncometabolite; Predictive and prognostic biomarker

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The tumor microenvironment plays a critical role in cancer development and progression, with lactate accumulation actively contributing to immune evasion. Measuring lactate levels in tumors has shown promise as a predictive and prognostic biomarker in various cancer types. Targeting lactate metabolism may be a priority in developing effective cancer therapies, although success in human trials has been limited so far due to the complexities of metabolic interactions.
The tumour microenvironment is of critical importance in cancer development and progression and includes the surrounding stromal and immune cells, extracellular matrix, and the milieu of metabolites and signalling molecules in the intercellular space. To support sustained mitotic activity cancer cells must reconfigure their metabolic phenotype. Lactate is the major by-product of such metabolic alterations and consequently, accumulates in the tumour. Lactate actively contributes to immune evasion, a hallmark of cancer, by directly inhibiting immune cell cytotoxicity and proliferation. Furthermore, lactate can recruit and induce immunosuppressive cell types, such as regulatory T cells, tumour-associated macrophages, and myeloid-derived suppressor cells which further suppress anti-tumour immune responses. Given its roles in oncogenesis, measuring intratumoural and systemic lactate levels has shown promise as a both predictive and prognostic biomarker in several cancer types. The efficacies of many anti-cancer therapies are limited by an immunosuppressive TME in which lactate is a major contributor, therefore, targeting lactate metabolism is a priority. Developing inhibitors of key proteins in lactate metabolism such as GLUT1, hexokinase, LDH, MCT and HIF have shown promise in preclinical studies, however there is a corresponding lack of success in human trials so far. This may be explained by a weakness of preclinical models that fail to reproduce the complexities of metabolic interactions in natura. The future of these therapies may be as an adjunct to more conventional treatments.

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