Cao Minyuan, Deng Yun, Hao Qing, Yan Huayun, Wang Quan-Lin, Dong Chunyan, Wu Jing, He Yajiao, Huang Li-Bin, Xia Xuyang, Gao Yongchao, Chen Hai-Ning, Zhang Wei-Han, Zhang Yan-Jing, Zhuo Xiaozhen, Dai Lunzhi, Hu Hongbo, Peng Yong, Zhang Feng, Liu Zhaoqian, Huang Weihua, Zhang Huiyuan, Yang Li, Shu Yang, Zhang Wei, Zhang Yan, Xu Heng
Department of Laboratory Medicine/Research Centre of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
Signal Transduct Target Ther. 2025 May 2;10(1):140. doi: 10.1038/s41392-025-02226-7.
The gut microbiota crucially regulates the efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) based immunotherapy, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear at the single-cell resolution. Using single-cell RNA sequencing and subsequent validations, we investigate gut microbiota-ICI synergy by profiling the tumor microenvironment (TME) and elucidating critical cellular interactions in mouse models. Our findings reveal that intact gut microbiota combined with ICIs may synergistically increase the proportions of CD8, CD4, and γδ T cells, reduce glycolysis metabolism, and reverse exhausted CD8 T cells into memory/effector CD8 T cells, enhancing antitumor response. This synergistic effect also induces macrophage reprogramming from M2 protumor Spp1 tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) to Cd74 TAMs, which act as antigen-presenting cells (APCs). These macrophage subtypes show a negative correlation within tumors, particularly during fecal microbiota transplantation. Depleting Spp1 TAMs in Spp1 conditional knockout mice boosts ICI efficacy and T cell infiltration, regardless of gut microbiota status, suggesting a potential upstream role of the gut microbiota and highlighting the crucial negative impact of Spp1 TAMs during macrophage reprogramming on immunotherapy outcomes. Mechanistically, we propose a γδ T cell-APC-CD8 T cell axis, where gut microbiota and ICIs enhance Cd40lg expression on γδ T cells, activating Cd40 overexpressing APCs (e.g., Cd74 TAMs) through CD40-CD40L-related NF-κB signaling and boosting CD8 T cell responses via CD86-CD28 interactions. These findings highlight the potential importance of γδ T cells and SPP1-related macrophage reprogramming in activating CD8 T cells, as well as the synergistic effect of gut microbiota and ICIs in immunotherapy through modulating the TME.
肠道微生物群对基于免疫检查点抑制剂(ICI)的免疫疗法的疗效起着至关重要的调节作用,但其潜在机制在单细胞分辨率下仍不清楚。我们通过单细胞RNA测序及后续验证,对肿瘤微环境(TME)进行分析,并阐明小鼠模型中的关键细胞间相互作用,以研究肠道微生物群与ICI的协同作用。我们的研究结果表明,完整的肠道微生物群与ICI联合使用可能会协同增加CD8、CD4和γδ T细胞的比例,降低糖酵解代谢,并将耗竭的CD8 T细胞逆转成记忆/效应CD8 T细胞,从而增强抗肿瘤反应。这种协同效应还会诱导巨噬细胞从M2促肿瘤Spp1肿瘤相关巨噬细胞(TAM)重编程为Cd74 TAM,后者作为抗原呈递细胞(APC)。这些巨噬细胞亚型在肿瘤内呈负相关,尤其是在粪便微生物群移植过程中。在Spp1条件性敲除小鼠中清除Spp1 TAM可提高ICI疗效和T细胞浸润,而与肠道微生物群状态无关,这表明肠道微生物群可能具有潜在的上游作用,并突出了Spp1 TAM在巨噬细胞重编程过程中对免疫治疗结果的关键负面影响。从机制上讲,我们提出了一个γδ T细胞-APC-CD8 T细胞轴,其中肠道微生物群和ICI增强γδ T细胞上的Cd40lg表达,通过CD40-CD40L相关的NF-κB信号激活过表达Cd40的APC(如Cd74 TAM),并通过CD86-CD28相互作用增强CD8 T细胞反应。这些发现突出了γδ T细胞和与SPP1相关的巨噬细胞重编程在激活CD8 T细胞方面的潜在重要性,以及肠道微生物群和ICI通过调节TME在免疫治疗中的协同作用。