Response to immune checkpoint blockade improved in pre-clinical model of breast cancer after bariatric surgery

Author:

Sipe Laura M1,Chaib Mehdi2,Korba Emily B1ORCID,Jo Heejoon1,Lovely Mary Camille1,Counts Brittany R3,Tanveer Ubaid1,Holt Jeremiah R1,Clements Jared C1,John Neena A1,Daria Deidre4,Marion Tony N4,Bohm Margaret S5,Sekhri Radhika6,Pingili Ajeeth K1,Teng Bin1,Carson James A3,Hayes D Neil1,Davis Matthew J1,Cook Katherine L7,Pierre Joseph F8,Makowski Liza1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

2. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

3. Integrative Muscle Biology Laboratory, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

4. Office of Vice Chancellor for Research, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

5. Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Biochemistry, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

6. Department of Pathology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

7. Department of Surgery, Wake Forest University

8. Department of Microbiology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center

Abstract

Bariatric surgery is becoming more prevalent as a sustainable weight loss approach, with vertical sleeve gastrectomy (VSG) being the first line of surgical intervention. We and others have shown that obesity exacerbates tumor growth while diet-induced weight loss impairs obesity-driven progression. It remains unknown how bariatric surgery-induced weight loss impacts cancer progression or alters responses to therapy. Using a pre-clinical model of diet induced obesity followed by VSG or diet-induced weight loss, breast cancer progression and immune checkpoint blockade therapy was investigated. Weight loss by bariatric surgery or weight matched dietary intervention before tumor engraftment protected against obesity-exacerbated tumor progression. However, VSG was not as effective as dietary intervention in reducing tumor burden despite achieving a similar extent of weight and adiposity loss. Circulating leptin did not associate with changes in tumor burden, however circulating IL-6 was elevated in mice after VSG. Uniquely, tumors in mice that received VSG displayed elevated inflammation and immune checkpoint ligand PD-L1+ myeloid and non-immune cells. Further, mice that received VSG had reduced tumor T lymphocytes and markers of cytolysis suggesting an ineffective anti-tumor microenvironment. VSG-associated elevation of PD-L1 prompted us to next investigate the efficacy of immune checkpoint blockade in lean, obese, and formerly obese mice that lost weight by VSG or weight matched controls. While obese mice were resistant to immune checkpoint blockade, anti-PD-L1 potently impaired tumor progression after VSG through improved anti-tumor immunity. Thus, in formerly obese mice, surgical weight loss followed by immunotherapy reduced breast cancer burden. Last, we compared transcriptomic changes in adipose tissue after bariatric surgery from both patients and mouse models that revealed a conserved bariatric surgery associated weight loss signature (BSAS). Importantly, BSAS significantly associated with decreased tumor volume. Our findings demonstrate conserved impacts of obesity and bariatric surgery-induced weight loss pathways associated with breast cancer progression.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Mary Kay Foundation

V Foundation for Cancer Research

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

American Association for Cancer Research

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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