Abstract A hallmark of glioblastoma (GBM) is an immunosuppressive microenvironment that is partially driven by tumor cell-derived secreted factors, highlighting the need for a more complete understanding of local immune suppressive mechanism. Altered secreted metabolite levels are observed in the GBM microenvironment; specifically, spermidine (a polyamine), which functions to drive cell proliferation, apoptosis, T cell lineage commitment, and myeloid cell-mediated suppression. However, the direct link between GBM cell-derived spermidine and the tumor microenvironment has yet to be determined. In syngeneic mouse GBM models, spermidine levels were increased in the tumor microenvironment and exogenous administration of spermidine accelerated tumor aggressiveness in an immune dependent-manner. Mechanistically, spermidine administration increased apoptosis of CD8+ T-cells and generated an exhausted phenotype. When ornithine decarboxylase (ODC1, the rate limiting enzyme in spermidine synthesis), was knocked down in tumor cells, no direct effect was observed on tumor cell growth. However, there was an increase in time to tumor succumbence and a concomitant increase in CD8+ T-cells and decrease in CD8+ T cell exhaustion. In GBM patients, there was a negative correlation between ODC1 expression and CD8+ T-cells present near the tumor. Additionally, patients with a favorable prognosis had significantly lower intratumoral levels of spermidine compared to patients with a poor prognosis. Taken together, these results demonstrate that spermidine functions as a tumor cell-derived metabolite that drives tumor progression through reducing CD8+T cell number and altering their phenotype. These findings have clinical implications as clinical trials using a polyamine biosynthesis inhibitor alone have not been very effective in GBM patients, suggesting the need for additional combination immunotherapies. Finally, spermidine is also produced at prominent levels by commensal gut microbes as well as absorbed from consumption of foods such as mushrooms; investigation into how these distal spermidine sources impact GBM growth via the gut-brain axis is actively ongoing.
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