Dual GLP-1R agonist and anti-IL-17A therapy suppresses obesity-driven leukemia in PTPN11-mutant mice
Background
The escalating global prevalence of obesity is increasingly linked to various cancers, including hematopoietic malignancies. However, the precise mechanisms by which obesity influences mutation-driven myeloid leukemias, such as those involving PTPN11 (Shp2) mutations, remain poorly understood. Current standard-of-care treatments for myeloid leukemias often face challenges, particularly in high-risk obese patients where metabolic inflammation can exacerbate disease progression. Identifying novel therapeutic targets that address this metabolic-immune axis is crucial to improve outcomes for these patients. This research investigates the roles of IL-17A and GLP-1R signaling in bridging obesity with leukemogenesis.
Study Design
Researchers first analyzed UK Biobank data from over 440,000 individuals to identify correlations between obesity traits, type 2 diabetes, plasma IL-17A, GLP-1R expression, and myeloid malignancy risk. Subsequently, they established an in vivo model by transplanting PTPN11 (Shp2E76K/+) mutant hematopoietic stem/progenitors into obese mice. This model allowed for the study of obesity's impact on leukemogenesis. The therapeutic intervention involved dual therapy with an anti-IL-17A antibody and a GLP-1R agonist, administered to the obese, leukemic mice. Primary endpoints included leukemic burden, myeloid cell expansion, lipid metabolic rewiring, IL-17A activation, M2-like tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) accumulation, T-cell exhaustion, and antigen presentation.
Results
Analysis of UK Biobank data revealed that obesity traits, including elevated BMI and waist-to-hip ratio, were significantly associated with type 2 diabetes, increased plasma IL-17A, reduced GLP-1R expression, and a heightened risk of myeloid malignancies. In the preclinical mouse model, transplantation of PTPN11 (Shp2E76K/+) mutant hematopoietic stem/progenitors into obese mice demonstrated that metabolic inflammation markedly accelerated leukemogenesis. This acceleration was characterized by myeloid cell expansion, lipid metabolic rewiring, IL-17A activation, and accumulation of M2-like tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), alongside T-cell exhaustion and impaired antigen presentation. Importantly, the dual therapy with an anti-IL-17A antibody and a GLP-1R agonist effectively reversed these detrimental effects. > The combined treatment significantly reduced M2-like TAMs, restored Ciita-dependent antigen presentation, reactivated Tyk2-mediated IFNγ signaling, and re-established robust T-cell responses, ultimately leading to a substantial reduction in leukemic burden.
Key Findings
- Obesity traits in humans correlated with increased plasma IL-17A, reduced GLP-1R expression, and higher myeloid malignancy risk.
- Obesity accelerated leukemogenesis in PTPN11-mutant mice via myeloid expansion, lipid rewiring, and IL-17A activation.
- Obesity-induced leukemia was characterized by M2-like TAM accumulation, T-cell exhaustion, and impaired antigen presentation.
- Dual therapy with anti-IL-17A antibody and GLP-1R agonist reversed these effects in mice.
- Treatment reduced M2-like TAMs, restored antigen presentation, reactivated T-cell responses, and reduced leukemic burden.
Why It Matters
This study provides a critical mechanistic link between obesity, IL-17A-driven inflammation, and SHP2-mutant myeloid leukemias, offering a novel therapeutic avenue. For obese patients with myeloid malignancies, particularly those with PTPN11 mutations, this dual therapy strategy could represent a significant advancement beyond conventional treatments. The findings suggest that targeting both metabolic inflammation via GLP-1R activation and the IL-17A pathway could synergistically suppress disease progression. While currently preclinical, this research highlights a tractable therapeutic strategy that warrants further investigation, potentially leading to new protocols for managing high-risk obese patients with leukemia by addressing the underlying metabolic-immune dysfunction.
obesity
leukemia
myeloid-leukemia
glp-1r-agonist
il-17a
inflammation