(Press-News.org) A new study from the University of Pittsburgh shows for the first time how exercise improves cancer outcomes and enhances response to immunotherapy in mice by reshaping the gut microbiome.
The research, published in the journal Cell, found that these benefits are driven by a specific compound called formate, which is produced by gut bacteria in exercised mice and was also associated with better outcomes in patients with melanoma.
“We already knew that exercise increases the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapies, and we separately knew that exercise changes the microbiome in mice and humans,” said senior author Marlies Meisel, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Immunology at the Pitt School of Medicine and affiliated with UPMC Hillman Cancer Center. “This study connects those dots by showing how exercise-induced changes in the gut microbiome boost the immune system and enhance immunotherapy efficiency via formate. These findings open the door to new therapeutic strategies targeting the microbiome.”
Lead author Catherine Phelps, a Graduate Program in Microbiology and Immunology student in Meisel’s lab, and the research team started by comparing mice that had completed four weeks of regular exercise to those that remained sedentary. The exercised animals had smaller tumors and better survival when challenged with an aggressive form of melanoma. But these benefits disappeared when they used germ-free rodents or treated the mice with antibiotics that killed off their gut microbiome.
“When we removed microbes from the equation, exercise no longer had any effect on cancer outcomes in mice,” said Phelps. “We were surprised to see such a clear signal that the beneficial effects of exercise were due to the microbiome.”
Next, the researchers showed that it was compounds, or metabolites, produced by bacteria rather than the bacteria themselves driving these effects. They then used a machine learning tool called SLIDE that analyzes metabolic pathways to identify microbiota-derived formate as the key player.
Additional experiments showed that formate acts by enhancing the potency of CD8 T cells, the chief cancer-killing battalion of the immune system. In mouse models of melanoma, adenocarcinoma and lymphoma, daily oral formate greatly inhibited tumor growth and improved survival. Formate also enhanced the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy in mice with melanoma.
“It’s really exciting to identify a specific bacterial metabolite that mimicked the effects of exercise in mice,” said Meisel. “In the future, formate could potentially be investigated as an adjuvant therapy to improve the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors in non-responders.”
To investigate the relevance of formate in humans, Meisel and her team looked at advanced melanoma patients who received immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Those with high levels of formate in their blood had better progression-free survival than patients with low levels of the metabolite.
And when they performed fecal microbial transplants (FMT) from people with either high or low levels of formate into mice with aggressive melanoma, strikingly, the animals that received the high formate fecal transplant had enhanced T cell activity and better tumor control.
FMT is already being explored as a therapy to improve immunotherapy outcomes in non-responders. But why some “super donor” stool leads to better outcomes is not entirely clear.
“We want to describe metabolic biomarkers to identify FMT super donors because that’s really a black box,” said Meisel. “Currently everyone focuses on bacterial species, but our research suggests that it’s not just about which microbes are present, but what they are doing and which metabolites they are producing.”
Now, Meisel and her team are investigating whether exercise-induced changes to the gut microbiome could play a role in other diseases such as autoimmune disorders. They are also interested in understanding the mechanisms by which exercise influences the microbiome in the first place.
Other authors of the study are listed in the manuscript.
This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health (R01 DK130897, R01 CA293654, R21 CA259636, P50 CA254865, T32 CA082084, F32 CA284780, F31 CA290756, R01 HL160747, 1R01HL162658, T32 DK007665, AI118807, DK138912, AI188307, R01AI168478, R21AI163721, P30 CA047904, DP2 AI164325, S10OD023402, S10OD032141, R01CA253329 and U01CA272541), the Melanoma Research Alliance (820677), the Burroughs Wellcome Fund (1017880), the United States–Israel Binational Science Foundation (2021025), the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Department of Immunology, the University of Vienna Research Platform Active Ageing and the Interreg Slovakia–Austria program, the Kansas IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (P20 GM103418), and the Kansas State University Johnson Cancer Research Center Expansion and Innovation Award.
END
Gut microbes key to understanding how exercise boosts cancer immunity
2025-07-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Morning vs bedtime dosing and nocturnal blood pressure reduction in patients with hypertension
2025-07-09
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial of antihypertensive chronotherapy, bedtime dosing provided better control of nocturnal blood pressure and improved the circadian rhythm, without reducing the efficacy on mean daytime or 24-hour blood pressure, or increasing the risk of nocturnal hypotension. These findings support the potential advantages of bedtime administration and offer new evidence to guide future research on antihypertensive chronotherapy.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Xiaoping Chen, MD, email xiaopingchen15@126.com.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.19354)
Editor’s ...
BMI in children before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic
2025-07-09
About The Study: This cross-sectional study including 426,000 children in Denmark found that body mass index (BMI) outcomes of COVID-19 pandemic–related control policies and restrictions were not exclusively observed among children with obesity, which suggests that pandemic-related mitigation policies targeting children and adolescents in all BMI categories are warranted. The findings of this study highlight differences among children of varying ages and BMI classes.
Corresponding Author: To contact ...
Branching out: Tomato genes point to new medicines
2025-07-09
Picture juicy red tomatoes on the vine. What do you see? Some tomato varieties have straight vines. Others are branched. The question is why. New research from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) provides the strongest evidence to date that the answer lies in what are called cryptic mutations. The findings have implications for agriculture and medicine, as they could help scientists fine-tune plant breeding techniques and clinical therapeutics.
Cryptic mutations are differences in DNA that don’t affect physical traits unless certain other genetic changes occur at the same time. CSHL Professor & HHMI Investigator Zachary Lippman has ...
Charité study analyzes 400 million years of enzyme evolution
2025-07-09
Enzymes catalyze chemical reactions in organisms - without which life would not be possible. Leveraging AlphaFold2 artificial intelligence, researchers at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin have now succeeded in analyzing the laws of their evolution on a large scale. In the journal Nature*, they describe the parts of enzymes that change comparatively quickly and the parts that remain practically unchanged over time. These findings are relevant to the development of new antibiotics, for example.
Enzymes resemble ...
Large-scale DNA study maps 37,000 years of disease history
2025-07-09
A research team led by Eske Willerslev, professor at the University of Copenhagen and the University of Cambridge, has recovered ancient DNA from 214 known human pathogens in prehistoric humans from Eurasia.
The study shows, among other things, that the earliest known evidence of zoonotic diseases – illnesses transmitted from animals to humans, like COVID in recent times – dates back to around 6,500 years ago, with such diseases becoming more widespread approximately 5,000 years ago. It is ...
Results from largest review of its kind on antidepressant withdrawal symptoms
2025-07-09
The largest review of ‘gold standard’ antidepressant withdrawal studies to date has identified the type and incidence of symptoms experienced by people discontinuing antidepressants, finding most people do not experience severe withdrawal.
In a systematic review and meta-analysis of previous randomised controlled trials relating to antidepressant withdrawal, a team of researchers led by Imperial College London and King’s College London concluded that, while participants who stopped antidepressants did experience an average of one more symptom than those who continued or were taking ...
Twist to the M-ax(is): New twist platform opens path to quantum simulation of more exotic states of matter
2025-07-09
Twisted materials—known as moiré structures—have revolutionized modern physics, emerging as today's "alchemy" by creating entirely new phases of matter through simple geometric manipulation. The term "moiré" may sound familiar—it describes the strange rippling patterns you sometimes see when photographing striped shirts or screens; in physics, the same underlying principle applies at the atomic scale. Imagine taking two atomically thin sheets of either the same or different materials, stacking them up together, and rotating one layer slightly relative ...
Chang'e-6 samples unlock secrets of the Moon’s farside
2025-07-09
The Moon's near and far sides exhibit striking asymmetry—from topography and crustal thickness to volcanic activity—yet the origins of these differences long puzzled scientists. China's Chang'e-6 mission, launched on May 3, 2024, changed this by returning 1,935.3 grams of material from the lunar farside's South Pole–Aitken Basin (SPA), the Moon's largest, deepest, and oldest known impact structure, measuring 2,500 kilometers in diameter. The samples arrived on Earth on June 25, 2024.
Previous studies indicated that the SPA was formed by a colossal impact approximately 4.25 billion years ago, releasing energy greater than that of a trillion ...
Teaching lasers to self-correct in high-precision patterned laser micro-grooving
2025-07-09
In International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing, a new laser machining method that dynamically adapts its beam shape is proposed to fabricate microgrooves with complex, highly precise cross-sections—some with a root mean square error decreased to less than 0.5 μm when processing microgrooves with a width of 10 μm.
The technique, developed by researchers at the Southern University of Science and Technology (SUSTech) in Shenzhen, China, could advance the production of microfluidic devices, sensors, and heat dissipation systems by allowing for rapid and scalable manufacturing of custom microstructures.
Laser micromachining has long been constrained by the fundamental ...
EGFR-targeted therapy resistance in breast and head & neck cancers
2025-07-09
“By synthesizing current insights on both RTK and non-RTK mediated resistance against anti-EGFR therapies, this review aims to guide future research and improve therapeutic strategies for these cancers.”
BUFFALO, NY – July 9, 2025 – A new review was published in Volume 16 of Oncotarget on June 25, 2025, titled “Challenges and resistance mechanisms to EGFR targeted therapies in head and neck cancers and breast cancer: Insights into RTK dependent and independent mechanisms.”
Researchers from the University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati ...