Dietary restriction reprograms CD8+ T cell fate to enhance anti-tumour immunity and immunotherapy responses
Overview
Paper Summary
This preclinical mouse study found that dietary restriction (DR) significantly slows tumor growth by reprogramming CD8+ T cells in the tumor microenvironment. DR promotes the expansion of highly functional, cytotoxic T cells and limits exhausted T cells, primarily by increasing ketone body oxidation. Furthermore, DR synergizes with anti-PD1 immunotherapy, enhancing its anti-tumor effects in these mouse models.
Explain Like I'm Five
Eating less helped mice's immune cells fight cancer better, especially with other treatments, by changing how those cells use energy. But remember, this was just in mice, not people.
Possible Conflicts of Interest
Two authors, S.M.K. (Scott M. Kennedy) and R.G.J. (Russell G. Jones), declared conflicts of interest. S.M.K. is on scientific advisory boards and holds equity in several pharmaceutical/therapeutics companies (EvolveImmune Therapeutics, Affini-T Therapeutics, Arvinas, Pfizer). R.G.J. is a scientific advisor to Servier Pharmaceuticals and a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of Immunomet Therapeutics. These financial interests in companies developing related therapies represent a conflict.
Identified Limitations
Rating Explanation
The research is well-designed with detailed mechanistic insights into how dietary restriction affects T cells and tumor immunity in mice. However, the findings are entirely based on preclinical animal models, and the authors explicitly state that the results may not translate to humans due to inherent differences in tumor biology and immune responses, which severely limits direct applicability to human health claims at this stage. The identified conflicts of interest also contribute to a conservative rating.
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