Grant Details
Grant Number: |
3U01CA272529-03S2 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Playdon, Mary |
Organization: |
University Of Utah |
Project Title: |
Ceramides as Novel Drivers of Metabolic Dysfunction and Colorectal Cancer |
Fiscal Year: |
2024 |
Abstract
SUMMARY
In response to the burgeoning worldwide obesity pandemic, the rate of obesity-associated colorectal cancer
(CRC) remains an enormous public health burden. The metabolic determinants of CRC are complex and
remain under debate. Ceramides are pathogenic lipids that signal a state of nutrition excess and accumulate in
organs that are not suited for fat storage, driving insulin resistance and dyslipidemia. Our preliminary data also
demonstrate that ceramides are critical intermediates linking nutritional inputs like fatty acids to intestinal stem
cell proliferation. Our long-term goal is to understand the role of ceramide metabolism in the development of
CRC and to identify pharmacologic and dietary strategies to intervene upon ceramide metabolism for cancer
prevention. Our central hypothesis is that ceramide metabolism is a key component of metabolic
dysregulation underlying CRC. We propose a transdisciplinary collaboration, utilizing epidemiologic and clinical
cohorts and animal experiments, to conduct synergistic analyses and interventions to address our hypothesis.
In Aim 1a, using a rigorous discovery-replication design, we will characterize a ceramide-based CRC risk
score in serum from participants in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)
(n=1260cases/1260 controls), and the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian (PLCO) cancer cohort (n=1234
cases/1234 controls), and identify a dietary pattern strongly linked to ceramides. In Aim 1b, we will determine
the effects of medical and surgical weight loss and changes in body composition on the ceramide CRC risk
score in our ongoing Utah Bariatric Surgery Cohort. In Aim 1c, we will measure the association of genetically
predicted levels of circulating ceramides with risk of CRC using data from 57,873 CRC cases and 67,087
controls in the Genetics and Epidemiology of CRC Consortium (GECCO), and test for gene by dietary pattern
interaction. In Aim 2, we will determine whether systemic or tissue-specific reduction of ceramides affects CRC
development. We will impede ceramide synthesis by inhibiting dihydroceramide desaturase-1 (DES1) action
genetically (Aim 2a) and pharmacologically (Aim 2b), and via a serine or time restricted dietary pattern (Aim
2c), to test for effects on gut, liver and adipose depots and colorectal tumor incidence in an azoxymethane
mouse model of CRC. The study leverages a new class of DES1 inhibitors that lower tissue ceramides and
ameliorate the pathogenic consequences of obesity. The proposed study fills a major gap in evidence for
understanding how ceramides contribute to the metabolic dysregulation underlying CRC. We propose a fully
translational approach integrating epidemiologic associations between ceramides and colorectal malignancies
and preclinical studies testing the utility of ceramide-lowering interventions on cancer endpoints. Findings will
have important implications for understanding the biologic mechanisms underpinning obesity-associated
metabolic dysregulation in CRC and for identifying new targets for CRC prevention.
Project Summary/Abstract Page 6
Publications
None. See parent grant details.