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Alcohol reshapes a liver premetastatic niche for cancer by extra- and intrahepatic crosstalk-mediated immune evasion

Authors :
Qiu, Xiaofang
Zhou, Jiaqi
Xu, Hong
Li, Yongyin
Ma, Shudong
Qiao, Hang
Zeng, Kangxin
Wang, Qiongqiong
Ouyang, Jiahe
Liu, Yuanhan
Ding, Jian
Liu, Yantan
Zhang, Junhao
Shi, Min
Liao, Yulin
Liao, Wangjun
Lin, Li
Source :
Molecular Therapy; 20240101, Issue: Preprints
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cancer metastatic organotropism is still a mystery. The liver is known to be susceptible to cancer metastasis and alcoholic injury. However, it is unclear whether and how alcohol facilitates liver metastasis and how to intervene. Here, we show that alcohol preferentially promotes liver metastasis in colon-cancer-bearing mice and post-surgery pancreatic cancer patients. The mechanism is that alcohol triggers an extra- and intrahepatic crosstalk to reshape an immunosuppressive liver microenvironment. In detail, alcohol upregulates extrahepatic IL-6 and hepatocellular IL-6 receptor expression, resulting in hepatocyte STAT3 signaling activation and downstream lipocalin-2 (Lcn2) upregulation. Furthermore, LCN2 promotes T cell-exhaustion neutrophil recruitment and cancer cell epithelial plasticity. In contrast, knocking out hepatocellular Stat3or systemic Il6in alcohol-treated mice preserves the liver microenvironment and suppresses liver metastasis. This mechanism is reflected in hepatocellular carcinoma patients, in that alcohol-associated signaling elevation in noncancerous liver tissue indicates adverse prognosis. Accordingly, we discover a novel application for BBI608, a small molecular STAT3 inhibitor that can prevent liver metastasis. BBI608 pretreatment protects the liver and suppresses alcohol-triggered premetastatic niche formation. In conclusion, under extra- and intrahepatic crosstalk, the alcoholic injured liver forms a favorable niche for cancer cell metastasis, while BBI608 is a promising anti-metastatic agent targeting such microenvironments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15250016 and 15250024
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Molecular Therapy
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63579616
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2023.07.012