Division of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, University of California Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, CA, United States.
School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Sacramento, CA, United States.
Front Immunol. 2022 Aug 12;13:983344. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.983344. eCollection 2022.
The microbiome has clearly been established as a cutting-edge field in tumor immunology and immunotherapy. Growing evidence supports the role of the microbiome in immune surveillance, self-tolerance, and response to immune checkpoint inhibitors such as anti PD-L1 and CTLA-4 blockade (1-6). Moreover, recent studies including those using fecal microbial transplantation (FMT) have demonstrated that response to checkpoint immunotherapies may be conferred or eliminated through gut microbiome modulation (7, 8). Consequently, studies evaluating microbiota-host immune and metabolic interactions remain an area of high impact research. While observations in murine models have highlighted the importance of the microbiome in response to therapy, we lack sufficient understanding of the exact mechanisms underlying these interactions. Furthermore, mouse and human gut microbiome composition may be too dissimilar for discovery of all relevant gut microbial biomarkers. Multiple cancers in dogs, including lymphoma, high grade gliomas, melanomas and osteosarcoma (OSA) closely resemble their human analogues, particularly in regard to metastasis, disease recurrence and response to treatment. Importantly, dogs with these spontaneous cancers also have intact immune systems, suggesting that microbiome analyses in these subjects may provide high yield information, especially in the setting of novel immunotherapy regimens which are currently expanding rapidly in canine comparative oncology (9, 10). Additionally, as onco-microbiotic therapies are developed to modify gut microbiomes for maximal responsiveness, large animal models with intact immune systems will be useful for trialing interventions and monitoring adverse events. Together, pre-clinical mechanistic studies and large animal trials can help fully unlock the potential of the microbiome as a diagnostic and therapeutic target in cancer.
微生物组显然已成为肿瘤免疫学和免疫治疗的前沿领域。越来越多的证据支持微生物组在免疫监视、自身耐受以及对免疫检查点抑制剂(如抗 PD-L1 和 CTLA-4 阻断剂)的反应中的作用(1-6)。此外,最近的研究,包括使用粪便微生物移植(FMT)的研究,已经证明,对检查点免疫疗法的反应可能通过肠道微生物组的调节来赋予或消除(7、8)。因此,评估微生物组-宿主免疫和代谢相互作用的研究仍然是一个具有高影响力的研究领域。虽然在小鼠模型中的观察强调了微生物组在治疗反应中的重要性,但我们对这些相互作用的确切机制了解不足。此外,由于小鼠和人类肠道微生物组的组成可能差异太大,因此可能无法发现所有相关的肠道微生物生物标志物。犬类的多种癌症,包括淋巴瘤、高级别神经胶质瘤、黑色素瘤和骨肉瘤(OSA),与人类的相应癌症非常相似,特别是在转移、疾病复发和对治疗的反应方面。重要的是,患有这些自发性癌症的犬类也具有完整的免疫系统,这表明对这些对象进行微生物组分析可能会提供高收益的信息,尤其是在新型免疫治疗方案迅速扩展的犬类比较肿瘤学领域(9、10)。此外,随着用于修饰肠道微生物组以实现最大反应性的抗肿瘤微生物组疗法的发展,具有完整免疫系统的大动物模型将有助于尝试干预措施并监测不良反应。总之,临床前机制研究和大动物试验可以帮助充分挖掘微生物组作为癌症诊断和治疗靶点的潜力。