Obesity-associated NLRC4 inflammasome activation drives breast cancer progression

Ryan Kolb, Liem Phan, Nicholas Borcherding, Yinghong Liu, Fang Yuan, Ann M. Janowski, Qing Xie, Kathleen R. Markan, Wei Li, Matthew J. Potthoff, Enrique Fuentes-Mattei, Lesley G. Ellies, C. Michael Knudson, Mong Hong Lee, Sai Ching J. Yeung, Suzanne L. Cassel, Fayyaz S. Sutterwala, Weizhou Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

173 Scopus citations

Abstract

Obesity is associated with an increased risk of developing breast cancer and is also associated with worse clinical prognosis. The mechanistic link between obesity and breast cancer progression remains unclear, and there has been no development of specific treatments to improve the outcome of obese cancer patients. Here we show that obesity-associated NLRC4 inflammasome activation/ interleukin (IL)-1 signalling promotes breast cancer progression. The tumour microenvironment in the context of obesity induces an increase in tumour-infiltrating myeloid cells with an activated NLRC4 inflammasome that in turn activates IL-1β, which drives disease progression through adipocyte-mediated vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) expression and angiogenesis. Further studies show that treatment of mice with metformin inhibits obesity-associated tumour progression associated with a marked decrease in angiogenesis. This report provides a causal mechanism by which obesity promotes breast cancer progression and lays out a foundation to block NLRC4 inflammasome activation or IL-1β signalling transduction that may be useful for the treatment of obese cancer patients.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number13007
JournalNature communications
Volume7
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 6 2016

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemistry
  • General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
  • General Physics and Astronomy

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