先天免疫系统
刺
免疫
厌氧糖酵解
免疫系统
干扰素基因刺激剂
糖酵解
生物
细胞生物学
免疫检查点
己糖激酶
癌症研究
免疫学
免疫疗法
生物化学
新陈代谢
工程类
航空航天工程
作者
Liting Zhang,Congqing Jiang,Yunhong Zhong,Kongliang Sun,Huiru Jing,Jiayu Song,Jun Xie,Yaru Zhou,Mao Tian,Chuchu Zhang,Xiaona Sun,Shaowei Wang,Xi Cheng,Yuelan Zhang,Wei Wei,Xiang Li,Bishi Fu,Pinghui Feng,Bing Wu,Hong‐Bing Shu
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41556-023-01185-x
摘要
Evasion of antitumour immunity is a hallmark of cancer. STING, a putative innate immune signalling adaptor, has a pivotal role in mounting antitumour immunity by coordinating innate sensing and adaptive immune surveillance in myeloid cells. STING is markedly silenced in various human malignancies and acts as a cell-intrinsic tumour suppressor. How STING exerts intrinsic antitumour activity remains unclear. Here, we report that STING restricts aerobic glycolysis independent of its innate immune function. Mechanistically, STING targets hexokinase II (HK2) to block its hexokinase activity. As such, STING inhibits HK2 to restrict tumour aerobic glycolysis and promote antitumour immunity in vivo. In human colorectal carcinoma samples, lactate, which can be used as a surrogate for aerobic glycolysis, is negatively correlated with STING expression level and antitumour immunity. Taken together, this study reveals that STING functions as a cell-intrinsic metabolic checkpoint that restricts aerobic glycolysis to promote antitumour immunity. These findings have important implications for the development of STING-based therapeutic modalities to improve antitumour immunotherapy. Zhang, Jiang and colleagues demonstrate that, independent of its role in innate immunity, STING can target and inhibit HK2 activity, thereby blocking tumour aerobic glycolysis and enhancing antitumour immune responses.
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