Diet and Tumor Genetics Conspire to Promote Prostate Cancer Metabolism and Shape the Tumor Microenvironment.

Obesity has been linked to prostate cancer in a stage-dependent manner, having no association with cancer initiation but correlating with disease progression in men with prostate cancer. Given the rising obesity rate and its association to aggressive prostate cancer, there is a growing need to understand the mechanisms underlying this relationship to identify patients at increased risk of lethal disease and inform therapeutic approaches. In this issue of Cancer Research, Boufaied and colleagues describe how diets high in saturated fatty acids promote MYC-driven prostate cancer. Leveraging MYC-expressing genetically engineered and allograft mouse models fed either a control low-fat or high-fat diet (HFD) enriched in saturated fatty acids, the authors found using digital pathology that HFD-fed mice exhibited increased tumor invasion. Metabolomics, transcriptomics, immunoblotting, and positron emission tomography of tumors from these mice demonstrated that a HFD promoted a metabolic shift in the tumors towards glycolysis. These preclinical data were supported by findings from two large clinical cohorts revealing that men diagnosed with prostate cancer and who consumed high levels of saturated fatty acids possessed tumors bearing glycolytic signatures. Deconvolution analyses and immunohistochemistry validation showed that these tumors also displayed increased angiogenesis and infiltration of immunosuppressive macrophages and regulatory T cells, the latter of which was also correlated with high saturated fat intake-associated glycolytic signatures in patient tumors. Together, these findings suggest that diets rich in saturated fatty acids, rather than obesity alone, accelerate MYC-driven prostate cancers through shifting tumor metabolism and shaping the tumor microenvironment. See related article by Boufaied et al., p. 1834.

Cancer research. 2024 Jun 04 [Epub]

Daniel E Frigo

Department of Cancer Systems Imaging, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.