作者
Yingjie Bian,Wei Li,Daniel M. Kremer,Peter Sajjakulnukit,Shasha Li,Joel Crespo,Zeribe C. Nwosu,Li Zhang,Arkadiusz Czerwonka,Anna Pawłowska,Houjun Xia,Jing Li,Peng Liao,Jiali Yu,Linda Vatan,Wojciech Szeliga,Shuang Wei,Sara Grove,J. Rebecca Liu,Karen McLean,Marcin Cieślik,Arul M. Chinnaiyan,Witold Zgodziński,Grzegorz Wallner,Iwona Wertel,Karolina Okła,Ilona Kryczek,Costas A. Lyssiotis,Weiping Zou
摘要
Abnormal epigenetic patterns correlate with effector T cell malfunction in tumours1–4, but the cause of this link is unknown. Here we show that tumour cells disrupt methionine metabolism in CD8+ T cells, thereby lowering intracellular levels of methionine and the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and resulting in loss of dimethylation at lysine 79 of histone H3 (H3K79me2). Loss of H3K79me2 led to low expression of STAT5 and impaired T cell immunity. Mechanistically, tumour cells avidly consumed methionine and outcompeted T cells for methionine by expressing high levels of the methionine transporter SLC43A2. Genetic and biochemical inhibition of tumour SLC43A2 restored H3K79me2 in T cells, thereby boosting spontaneous and checkpoint-induced tumour immunity. Moreover, methionine supplementation improved the expression of H3K79me2 and STAT5 in T cells, and this was accompanied by increased T cell immunity in tumour-bearing mice and patients with colon cancer. Clinically, tumour SLC43A2 correlated negatively with T cell histone methylation and functional gene signatures. Our results identify a mechanistic connection between methionine metabolism, histone patterns, and T cell immunity in the tumour microenvironment. Thus, cancer methionine consumption is an immune evasion mechanism, and targeting cancer methionine signalling may provide an immunotherapeutic approach. Expression of the transporter SLC43A2 by tumour cells allows them to outcompete T cells for methionine and thereby disrupt the survival and function of tumour-infiltrating T cells.