Abstract

Simple SummaryTo study the interplay between nutrition and intestinal metabolism in the context of colitis-driven colorectal carcinoma (CRC), we here investigated a nutritional therapy strategy in the presence or absence of EGFR-directed antibody therapy in mice to treat established colitis-driven CRCs in vivo. After CRC development, mice were fed a control diet or an isoenergetic glucose-free high-protein (GFHP) diet in the presence or absence of EGFR-directed antibody therapy. The GFHP diet was accompanied by a metabolic shift of the mice towards lower glycolysis activity. Both, GFHP diet or anti-EGFR antibody treatment, improved tumor differentiation and anti-tumor immune response, resulting in an efficient reduction of colonic tumor burden.To enable rapid proliferation, colorectal tumor cells up-regulate epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling and aerobic glycolysis, resulting in substantial lactate release into the tumor microenvironment and impaired anti-tumor immune responses. We hypothesized that a nutritional intervention designed to reduce aerobic glycolysis may boost the EGFR-directed antibody (Ab)-based therapy of pre-existing colitis-driven colorectal carcinoma (CRC). CRC development was induced by azoxymethane (AOM) and dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) administration to C57BL/6 mice. AOM/DSS-treated mice were fed a glucose-free, high-protein diet (GFHPD) or an isoenergetic control diet (CD) in the presence or absence of an i.p. injection of an anti-EGFR mIgG2a or respective controls. AOM/DSS-treated mice on a GFHPD displayed a reduced systemic glucose metabolism associated with reduced oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complex IV expression and diminished tumor loads. Comparable but not additive to an anti-EGFR-Ab therapy, the GFHPD was accompanied by enhanced tumoral goblet cell differentiation and decreased colonic PD-L1 and splenic CD3ε, as well as PD-1 immune checkpoint expression. In vitro, glucose-free, high-amino acid culture conditions reduced proliferation but improved goblet cell differentiation of murine and human CRC cell lines MC-38 and HT29-MTX in combination with down-regulation of PD-L1 expression. We here found GFHPD to systemically dampen glycolysis activity, thereby reducing CRC progression with a similar efficacy to EGFR-directed antibody therapy.

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