Lin Nina Yi-Tzu, Fukuoka Shota, Koyama Shohei, Motooka Daisuke, Tourlousse Dieter M, Shigeno Yuko, Matsumoto Yuki, Yamano Hiroyuki, Murotomi Kazutoshi, Tamaki Hideyuki, Irie Takuma, Sugiyama Eri, Kumagai Shogo, Itahashi Kota, Tanegashima Tokiyoshi, Fujimaki Kaori, Ito Sachiko, Shindo Mariko, Tsuji Takahiro, Wake Hiroaki, Watanabe Keisuke, Maeda Yuka, Enokida Tomohiro, Tahara Makoto, Yamashita Riu, Fujisawa Takao, Nomura Motoo, Kawazoe Akihito, Goto Koichi, Doi Toshihiko, Shitara Kohei, Mano Hiroyuki, Sekiguchi Yuji, Nakamura Shota, Benno Yoshimi, Nishikawa Hiroyoshi
Division of Cancer Immunology, National Cancer Center Research Institute, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Immunology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Nature. 2025 Jul 14. doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-09249-8.
Gut microbiota influence the antitumour efficacy of immune checkpoint blockade, but the mechanisms of action have not been fully elucidated. Here, we show that a new strain of the bacterial genus Hominenteromicrobium (designated YB328) isolated from the faeces of patients who responded to programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) blockade augmented antitumour responses in mice. YB328 activated tumour-specific CD8 T cells through the stimulation of CD103CD11b conventional dendritic cells (cDCs), which, following exposure in the gut, migrated to the tumour microenvironment. Mice showed improved antitumour efficacy of PD-1 blockade when treated with faecal transplants from non-responder patients supplemented with YB238. This result suggests that YB328 could function in a dominant manner. YB328-activated CD103CD11b cDCs showed prolonged engagement with tumour-specific CD8 T cells and promoted PD-1 expression in these cells. Moreover, YB238-augmented antitumour efficacy of PD-1 blockade treatment was observed in multiple mouse models of cancer. Patients with elevated YB328 abundance had increased infiltration of CD103CD11b cDCs in tumours and had a favourable response to PD-1 blockade therapy in various cancer types. We propose that gut microbiota enhance antitumour immunity by accelerating the maturation and migration of CD103CD11b cDCs to increase the number of CD8 T cells that respond to diverse tumour antigens.
肠道微生物群会影响免疫检查点阻断的抗肿瘤疗效,但其作用机制尚未完全阐明。在此,我们发现从对程序性细胞死亡蛋白1(PD-1)阻断有反应的患者粪便中分离出的一种新的人肠微生物属菌株(命名为YB328)可增强小鼠的抗肿瘤反应。YB328通过刺激CD103CD11b传统树突状细胞(cDCs)激活肿瘤特异性CD8 T细胞,这些细胞在肠道中接触后迁移至肿瘤微环境。当用补充了YB238的无反应患者的粪便移植治疗时,小鼠的PD-1阻断抗肿瘤疗效得到改善。这一结果表明YB328可能以显性方式发挥作用。YB328激活的CD103CD11b cDCs与肿瘤特异性CD8 T细胞的接触时间延长,并促进这些细胞中PD-1的表达。此外,在多种癌症小鼠模型中均观察到YB238增强了PD-1阻断治疗的抗肿瘤疗效。YB328丰度升高的患者肿瘤中CD103CD11b cDCs的浸润增加,并且对各种癌症类型的PD-1阻断疗法有良好反应。我们提出,肠道微生物群通过加速CD103CD11b cDCs的成熟和迁移来增强抗肿瘤免疫力,以增加对多种肿瘤抗原产生反应的CD8 T细胞数量。
Cancer Immunol Immunother. 2025-6-30
PeerJ Comput Sci. 2017
Cancer Discov. 2024-11-1
Environ Microbiol. 2022-9