Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Exercise may also pump up immune cells

Study suggests they gain an enhanced ability to target, fight cancer cells

- By Gretchen Reynolds BRITTAINY NEWMAN /THE NEW YORK TIMES

Exercise may help to fight cancer by changing the inner workings of certain immune cells, according to an important new study in mice of how running affects tumors.

The study involved rodents but could also have implicatio­ns for understand­ing how exercise might affect cancer in people as well.

We already have considerab­le and compelling evidence that exercise alters our risks of developing or dying from malignanci­es.

In a large-scale 2016 epidemiolo­gical study, for instance, highly active people were found to be much less likely to develop 13 different types of cancer than people who rarely moved.

Likewise, a review of past research released last year by the American College of Sports Medicine concluded that regular exercise may reduce our risks of developing some cancers by as much as 69%. That analysis also found that exercise may improve treatment outcomes and prolong life in people who already have cancer.

But it is not yet fully clear how working out may affect tumors.

Animal studies show that exercise lessens inflammati­on and may otherwise make the body’s internal environmen­t less hospitable to malignanci­es. But many questions remain unanswered about the interplay of exercise and cancer.

So, recently, a group of scientists from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and other institutio­ns began to wonder about

Working out may help the immune system eradicate cancer cells, a study suggests.

white blood cells.

Part of the immune system, white blood cells play a key role in our defense against cancer by noting, navigating to and often annihilati­ng malignant cells. Researcher­s have known for some time that different types of immune cells tend to target different types of cancer.

But little has been known about if and how exercise affects any of these immune cells and if those changes might somehow be contributi­ng to exercise’s cancer-blunting effects.

For the new study, which was published in October in eLife, the scientists in Sweden decided to learn more by inoculatin­g mice with different types of cancer cells and letting some of the rodents run, while others remained

sedentary.

After several weeks, the researcher­s saw that some of the runners showed little evidence of tumor growth. More intriguing, most of these active mice had been inoculated with cancer cells that are known to be particular­ly vulnerable to a specific type of immune cell, known as CD8+ T cells, which tend, primarily, to fight certain forms of breast cancer and other solid tumors.

Perhaps, the researcher­s speculated, exercise was having particular effects on those immune cells.

To find out, they then chemically blocked the action of these T cells in animals carrying tumor cells and let them run.

After several weeks and despite being active, the animals without function

ing CD8+ T cells showed significan­t tumor growth, suggesting that the CD8+ cells, when working, must be a key part of how exercise helps to stave off some cancers.

For further confirmati­on, the scientists then isolated CD8+ T cells from animals that had run and those that had not. They then injected one or the other type of T cells into sedentary, cancerpron­e animals. Animals that received immune cells from the runners subsequent­ly fought off tumors noticeably better than animals that had received immune cells from inactive mice.

These results surprised and excited the researcher­s, said Randall Johnson, a professor of molecular physiology with dual appointmen­ts at the

University of Cambridge in England and the Karolinska Institute, who oversaw the new study.

They seemed to demonstrat­e “that the effect of exercise on the T cells is intrinsic to the cells themselves and is persistent,” he said.

In other words, exercise had changed the cells in ways that lasted.

But what, the scientists wondered, was exercise doing to the cells that made them extra effective at fighting tumors?

To explore that question, the researcher­s let some mice run until they tired themselves out, while others sat quietly. They then drew blood from both groups and put the samples through a sophistica­ted machine that counts all of the molecules there.

The blood samples turned out to be quite different at a molecular level.

The runners’ blood contained far more substances related to fueling and metabolism, with especially high levels of lactate, which is produced in abundance by working muscles. Perhaps, the scientists speculated, lactate was affecting the runners’ T cells?

So, they added lactate to CD8+ T cells isolated from mice and grown in dishes and found that these cells became more active when faced with cancer cells than other T cells. Basically, having marinated in lactate, they became better cancer fighters.

In simpler terms, Johnson said, “It does seem from our studies that these T cells are potently affected by exercise.”

Of course, his and his colleagues’ experiment­s involved mice, not people. We humans also produce extra lactate and other related molecules after exercise (which the researcher­s confirmed in a final portion of their study, by drawing blood from people after a run and analyzing its molecular compositio­n).

But whether our CD8+ T cells respond in precisely the same way to working out remains uncertain.

The study also does not show if all exercise has the same effects on T cells or whether some workouts might be more beneficial than others for amping up these cells’ powers. It also does not suggest that exercise reduces cancer risk and progressio­n solely by strengthen­ing these cells. More likely, being active affects how well our bodies deal with malignanci­es in multiple and perhaps interlinke­d ways.

Johnson and his colleagues plan to explore many of these issues in future studies, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States