Vitamin A molecule helps cancer evade immune detection

Researchers have discovered that a byproduct of vitamin A, all-trans retinoic acid, weakens the immune system's fight against cancer and reduces the effectiveness of certain vaccines. In preclinical studies, a new drug called KyA33 blocks this pathway, enhancing immune responses and slowing tumor growth. The findings, from two studies, explain a long-standing paradox about vitamin A's role in cancer.

Scientists at the Princeton University Branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research have revealed how all-trans retinoic acid, a vitamin A metabolite, interferes with anti-cancer immunity. This molecule, produced by enzymes ALDH1a3 in cancer cells and ALDH1a2 in dendritic cells, promotes immune tolerance toward tumors. Dendritic cells, which activate immune defenses by presenting tumor antigens to T cells, become reprogrammed by retinoic acid, suppressing their maturation and anti-tumor activity.

One study, published in Nature Immunology and led by Yibin Kang and Cao Fang, examined dendritic cell vaccines, an immunotherapy that trains the immune system against cancer. The researchers found that during vaccine production, dendritic cells express ALDH1a2, generating high levels of retinoic acid that hinder their function. "We discovered that under conditions commonly employed to produce DC vaccines, differentiating dendritic cells begin expressing ALDH1a2, producing high levels of retinoic acid," said Fang. "The nuclear signaling pathway it activates then suppresses DC maturation, diminishing the ability of these cells to trigger anti-tumor immunity."

This mechanism also fosters less effective macrophages, further weakening vaccine performance. To counter it, the team developed KyA33, which inhibits retinoic acid production. In mouse models of melanoma, KyA33-enhanced vaccines delayed tumor development, and the drug alone stimulated immune attacks on tumors.

A companion study in iScience, led by Mark Esposito, used computational modeling and drug screening to create inhibitors targeting the retinoic acid pathway, long resistant to drug development. "Our study reveals the mechanistic basis for this paradox," Esposito noted, explaining how cancer cells exploit retinoic acid to suppress surrounding immune responses while avoiding its direct anti-proliferative effects.

The discoveries resolve why high vitamin A intake links to increased cancer risk despite lab evidence of its benefits. Kang highlighted the implications: "Taken together, our findings reveal the broad influence retinoic acid has in attenuating vitally important immune responses to cancer." Esposito and Kang have founded Kayothera to advance these inhibitors toward clinical trials for cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.

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Microscopic illustration showing UV rays disrupting YTHDF2 protein in skin cells, causing inflammation and tumor risk.
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Study reveals how sunlight disrupts a key safeguard against skin inflammation and cancer

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Researchers at the University of Chicago have shown that ultraviolet radiation can disable a protein that normally restrains inflammation in skin cells, promoting conditions that favor tumor development. The protein, YTHDF2, helps prevent harmful immune responses to sun-induced damage. The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications, suggest new strategies for reducing the risk of UV‑related skin cancer by targeting RNA–protein interactions.

Scientists at KAIST in South Korea have developed a novel therapy that transforms a tumor's own immune cells into potent cancer fighters directly inside the body. By injecting lipid nanoparticles into tumors, the treatment reprograms macrophages to produce cancer-recognizing proteins, overcoming barriers in solid tumor treatment. Early animal studies show promising reductions in tumor growth.

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Researchers at KAIST have developed an injection that transforms immune cells within tumors into active cancer-killing agents, bypassing the need for complex lab procedures. The method uses lipid nanoparticles to deliver instructions directly to macrophages, enabling them to recognize and attack cancer cells while boosting broader immune responses. In animal tests, the approach significantly slowed tumor growth in melanoma models.

Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine report that tumors exploit a CD47–thrombospondin-1 signal to push T cells into exhaustion, and that interrupting the interaction restores T cell activity and slows tumor growth in mouse models. The study was published on November 17, 2025, in Nature Immunology.

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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory researchers report that engineered anti-uPAR CAR T cells cleared senescence-linked cells in mice, improving intestinal regeneration, reducing inflammation and strengthening gut barrier function. The approach also aided recovery from radiation-related intestinal injury and showed regenerative signals in experiments using human intestinal and colorectal cells, raising the possibility of future clinical trials.

Researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory have identified key proteins and protein complexes that help certain carcinomas shift their cellular identity and potentially evade treatment. Two new studies, focusing on pancreatic cancer and tuft cell lung cancer, highlight molecular structures that could become targets for more precise and selective therapies.

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Researchers in Japan have uncovered how cancer cells use tiny vesicles to spread the immune-suppressing protein PD-L1, explaining why immunotherapy often fails. A protein called UBL3 directs this process, but common statins can disrupt it, potentially boosting treatment effectiveness. The findings, from patient samples and lab tests, suggest a simple way to improve outcomes for lung cancer patients.

 

 

 

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