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Correction of arginine metabolism with sepiapterin—the precursor of nitric oxide synthase cofactor BH4—induces immunostimulatory-shift of breast cancer

Xunzhen Zheng, Veani Fernando, Vandana Sharma, Yashna Walia, Joshua Letson, Saori Furuta

2020Biochemical Pharmacology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immunotherapy is a first-line treatment for many tumor types. However, most breast tumors are immuno-suppressive and only modestly respond to immunotherapy. We hypothesized that correcting arginine metabolism might improve the immunogenicity of breast tumors. We tested whether supplementing sepiapterin, the precursor of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4)—the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) cofactor—redirects arginine metabolism from the pathway synthesizing polyamines to that of synthesizing nitric oxide (NO) and make breast tumors more immunogenic. We showed that sepiapterin elevated NO but lowered polyamine levels in tumor cells, as well as in tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). This not only suppressed tumor cell proliferation, but also induced the conversion of TAMs from the immuno-suppressive M2-type to immuno-stimulatory M1-type. Furthermore, sepiapterin abrogated the expression of a checkpoint ligand, PD-L1, in tumors in a STAT3-dependent manner. This is the first study which reveals that supplementing sepiapterin normalizes arginine metabolism, improves the immunogenicity and inhibits the growth of breast tumor cells.

Topics & Concepts

TetrahydrobiopterinArginineNitric oxide synthaseNitric oxideCancer researchImmunogenicityImmunotherapyArginaseChemistryBiologyInternal medicineEndocrinologyCancerBiochemistryImmunologyImmune systemMedicineAmino acidPolyamine Metabolism and ApplicationsImmune cells in cancerAdenosine and Purinergic Signaling