Abstract

The immune system plays a crucial role in controlling colorectal cancer (CRC) development. Natural killer (NK) cells are tumoricidal but undergo exhaustion in CRC patients. The current research aims to understand the role of sirtuin 6 (SIRT6) in CRC-associated NK cell exhaustion in a murine inflammatory colorectal cancer model. To this end, inflammatory CRC was induced by treating mice with azoxymethane plus dextran sulfate sodium. The expression of SIRT6 in NK cells in murine mesenteric lymph nodes (mLNs) and the CRC tissue was characterized by Immunoblotting. SIRT6 knockdown was achieved by lentiviral transduction of murine splenic NK cells, followed by evaluation of NK cell proliferation and the expression of cytotoxic mediators using flow cytometry. NK cell cytotoxicity was measured by cytotoxicity assays. Adoptive transfer of murine NK cells was applied to analyze the effect of SIRT6 knockdown in vivo. We found that SIRT6 was up-regulated in infiltrating NK cells in the murine CRC tissue, especially NK cells with an exhausted phenotype and impaired cytotoxicity. SIRT6 knockdown significantly boosted murine splenic NK cell functionality, as evidenced by accelerated proliferation, increased production of cytotoxic mediators, and higher tumoricidal activity both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, the adoptive transfer of SIRT6-knockdown NK cells into CRC-bearing mice effectively suppressed CRC progression. Therefore, SIRT6 up-regulation is essential for murine NK cell exhaustion in CRC because it impedes the tumoricidal activity of murine NK cells. Artificial SIRT6 down-regulation could boost the function of infiltrating NK cells to oppress CRC progression in mice.

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