Mild dyslipidemia accelerates tumorigenesis through expansion of Ly6Chi monocytes and differentiation to pro-angiogenic myeloid cells

Author:

Tran ThiORCID,Lavillegrand Jean-Remi,Lereverend CedricORCID,Esposito Bruno,Cartier LucilleORCID,Montabord Melanie,Tran-Rajau Jaouen,Diedisheim MarcORCID,Gruel Nadège,Ouguerram Khadija,Paolini Lea,Lenoir OliviaORCID,Pinteaux Emmanuel,Brabencova Eva,Tanchot Corinne,Urquia Pauline,Lehmann-Che JacquelineORCID,Le Naour RichardORCID,Merrouche Yacine,Stockmann Christian,Mallat Ziad,Tedgui AlainORCID,Ait-Oufella HafidORCID,Tartour Eric,Potteaux StephaneORCID

Abstract

AbstractCancer and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share common risk factors such as dyslipidemia, obesity and inflammation. However, the role of pro-atherogenic environment and its associated low-grade inflammation in tumor progression remains underexplored. Here we show that feeding C57BL/6J mice with a non-obesogenic high fat high cholesterol diet (HFHCD) for two weeks to induce mild dyslipidemia, increases the pool of circulating Ly6Chi monocytes available for initial melanoma development, in an IL-1β-dependent manner. Descendants of circulating myeloid cells, which accumulate in the tumor microenvironment of mice under HFHCD, heighten pro-angiogenic and immunosuppressive activities locally. Limiting myeloid cell accumulation or targeting VEGF-A production by myeloid cells decrease HFHCD-induced tumor growth acceleration. Reverting the HFHCD to a chow diet at the time of tumor implantation protects against tumor growth. Together, these data shed light on cross-disease communication between cardiovascular pathologies and cancer.

Funder

Ligue Contre le Cancer

Association pour la recherche sur le cancer

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

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

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