作者
Hai P. Nguyen,Kelly An,Yusuke Ito,Bhushan N. Kharbikar,Rory R Sheng,Beatriz García Paredes,Elizabeth Murray,Kimberly Pham,Michael Brück,Xujia Zhou,Cassandra Biellak,Aki Ushiki,Mai Nobuhara,Sarah Fong,Daniel A. Bernards,Filipa Lynce,Deborah Dillon,Mark Jesus M. Magbanua,Laura A. Huppert,Heinz Hammerlindl,J Klein,Luis Valdiviez,Oliver Fiehn,Laura J. Esserman,Tejal A. Desai,Sook Wah Yee,Jennifer M. Rosenbluth,Nadav Ahituv
摘要
Abstract Tumors exhibit an increased ability to obtain and metabolize nutrients. Here, we implant engineered adipocytes that outcompete tumors for nutrients and show that they can substantially reduce cancer progression, a technology termed adipose manipulation transplantation (AMT). Adipocytes engineered to use increased amounts of glucose and fatty acids by upregulating UCP1 were placed alongside cancer cells or xenografts, leading to significant cancer suppression. Transplanting modulated adipose organoids in pancreatic or breast cancer genetic mouse models suppressed their growth and decreased angiogenesis and hypoxia. Co-culturing patient-derived engineered adipocytes with tumor organoids from dissected human breast cancers significantly suppressed cancer progression and proliferation. In addition, cancer growth was impaired by inducing engineered adipose organoids to outcompete tumors using tetracycline or placing them in an integrated cell-scaffold delivery platform and implanting them next to the tumor. Finally, we show that upregulating UPP1 in adipose organoids can outcompete a uridine-dependent pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma for uridine and suppress its growth, demonstrating the potential customization of AMT.