Inflammation Mediated by Gut Microbiome Alterations Promotes Lung Cancer Development and an Immunosuppressed Tumor Microenvironment

肠道菌群改变介导的炎症促进肺癌发展和免疫抑制的肿瘤微环境

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作者:Zahraa Rahal # ,Yuejiang Liu # ,Fuduan Peng ,Sujuan Yang ,Mohamed A Jamal ,Manvi Sharma ,Hannah Moreno ,Ashish V Damania ,Matthew C Wong ,Matthew C Ross ,Ansam Sinjab ,Tieling Zhou ,Minyue Chen ,Inti Tarifa Reischle ,Jiping Feng ,Chidera Chukwuocha ,Elizabeth Tang ,Camille Abaya ,Jamie K Lim ,Cheuk Hong Leung ,Heather Y Lin ,Nathaniel Deboever ,Jack J Lee ,Boris Sepesi ,Don L Gibbons ,Jennifer A Wargo ,Junya Fujimoto ,Linghua Wang ,Joseph F Petrosino ,Nadim J Ajami ,Robert R Jenq ,Seyed Javad Moghaddam # ,Tina Cascone # ,Kristi Hoffman # ,Humam Kadara

Abstract

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.

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