Rahal Zahraa, Liu Yuejiang, Peng Fuduan, Yang Sujuan, Jamal Mohamed A, Sharma Manvi, Moreno Hannah, Damania Ashish V, Wong Matthew C, Ross Matthew C, Sinjab Ansam, Zhou Tieling, Chen Minyue, Tarifa Reischle Inti, Feng Jiping, Chukwuocha Chidera, Tang Elizabeth, Abaya Camille, Lim Jamie K, Leung Cheuk Hong, Lin Heather Y, Deboever Nathaniel, Lee Jack J, Sepesi Boris, Gibbons Don L, Wargo Jennifer A, Fujimoto Junya, Wang Linghua, Petrosino Joseph F, Ajami Nadim J, Jenq Robert R, Moghaddam Seyed Javad, Cascone Tina, Hoffman Kristi, Kadara Humam
Department of Translational Molecular Pathology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, UTHealth Houston Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSBS), Houston, Texas.
Cancer Immunol Res. 2024 Dec 3;12(12):1736-1752. doi: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-24-0469.
Accumulating evidence indicates that the gut microbiome influences cancer progression and therapy. We recently showed that progressive changes in gut microbial diversity and composition are closely coupled with tobacco-associated lung adenocarcinoma in a human-relevant mouse model. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the loss of the antimicrobial protein Lcn2 in these mice exacerbates protumor inflammatory phenotypes while further reducing microbial diversity. Yet, how gut microbiome alterations impinge on lung adenocarcinoma development remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the role of gut microbiome changes in lung adenocarcinoma development using fecal microbiota transfer and delineated a pathway by which gut microbiome alterations incurred by loss of Lcn2 fostered the proliferation of proinflammatory bacteria of the genus Alistipes, triggering gut inflammation. This inflammation propagated systemically, exerting immunosuppression within the tumor microenvironment, augmenting tumor growth through an IL6-dependent mechanism and dampening response to immunotherapy. Corroborating our preclinical findings, we found that patients with lung adenocarcinoma with a higher relative abundance of Alistipes species in the gut showed diminished response to neoadjuvant immunotherapy. These insights reveal the role of microbiome-induced inflammation in lung adenocarcinoma and present new potential targets for interception and therapy.
越来越多的证据表明,肠道微生物群会影响癌症进展和治疗。我们最近发现,在一个与人类相关的小鼠模型中,肠道微生物多样性和组成的渐进性变化与烟草相关的肺腺癌密切相关。此外,我们还证明,这些小鼠体内抗菌蛋白Lcn2的缺失会加剧促肿瘤炎症表型,同时进一步降低微生物多样性。然而,肠道微生物群的改变如何影响肺腺癌的发展仍知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们使用粪便微生物群移植研究了肠道微生物群变化在肺腺癌发展中的作用,并描绘了一条途径,即Lcn2缺失引起的肠道微生物群改变促进了阿利斯杆菌属促炎细菌的增殖,引发肠道炎症。这种炎症全身扩散,在肿瘤微环境中发挥免疫抑制作用,通过依赖白细胞介素6的机制促进肿瘤生长,并减弱对免疫治疗的反应。与我们的临床前研究结果一致,我们发现,肠道中阿利斯杆菌属物种相对丰度较高的肺腺癌患者对新辅助免疫治疗的反应减弱。这些见解揭示了微生物群诱导的炎症在肺腺癌中的作用,并为拦截和治疗提供了新的潜在靶点。