Investigator

James P. Allison

Professor and Chair · University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Immunology

JPAJames P. Allison
Papers(1)
Exercise Training Red…
Collaborators(10)
Jennifer A. WargoJennifer B. DennisonJohannes F. FahrmannKaren Basen-EngquistKhoi ChuKrishna M. SinhaLaura Reyes-UribeManoj ChelvanambiMark F. MunsellNan Deng
Institutions(2)
The University Of Tex…The University Of Tex…

Papers

Exercise Training Reduces the Inflammatory Response and Promotes Intestinal Mucosa-Associated Immunity in Lynch Syndrome

Abstract Purpose: Lynch syndrome (LS) is a hereditary condition with a high lifetime risk of colorectal and endometrial cancers. Exercise is a non-pharmacologic intervention to reduce cancer risk, though its impact on patients with LS has not been prospectively studied. Here, we evaluated the impact of a 12-month aerobic exercise cycling intervention in the biology of the immune system in LS carriers. Patients and Methods: To address this, we enrolled 21 patients with LS onto a non-randomized, sequential intervention assignation, clinical trial to assess the effect of a 12-month exercise program that included cycling classes 3 times weekly for 45 minutes versus usual care with a one-time exercise counseling session as control. We analyzed the effects of exercise on cardiorespiratory fitness, circulating, and colorectal-tissue biomarkers using metabolomics, gene expression by bulk mRNA sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics by NanoString GeoMx. Results: We observed a significant increase in oxygen consumption (VO2peak) as a primary outcome of the exercise and a decrease in inflammatory markers (prostaglandin E) in colon and blood as the secondary outcomes in the exercise versus usual care group. Gene expression profiling and spatial transcriptomics on available colon biopsies revealed an increase in the colonic mucosa levels of natural killer and CD8+ T cells in the exercise group that were further confirmed by IHC studies. Conclusions: Together these data have important implications for cancer interception in LS, and document for the first-time biological effects of exercise in the immune system of a target organ in patients at-risk for cancer.

337Works
1Papers
25Collaborators

Positions

2012–

Professor and Chair

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Immunology

2004–

Professor and Chair

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center · Immunology

1985–

Professor

University of California Berkeley · Immunology

1983–

Associate Professor

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Science Park · Biochemistry

1977–

Assistant Professor

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Science Park · Biochemistry

Education

1977

Postdoc

Scripps Research Institute · Molecular Immunology

1973

PhD

University of Texas at Austin · Biological Sciences

1969

BS

University of Texas at Austin · Microbiology

Country

US

Keywords
ImmunologyCancer ImmunotherapyT cell biologyCheckpoint inhibition