Inflammation mediated by gut microbiome alterations promotes lung cancer development and an immunosuppressed tumor microenvironment

Author:

Rahal Zahraa1ORCID,Liu Yuejiang2ORCID,Peng Fuduan3ORCID,Yang Sujuan4ORCID,Jamal Mohamed A.2ORCID,Sharma Manvi2ORCID,Moreno Hannah5ORCID,Damania Ashish V.2ORCID,Wong Matthew C.2ORCID,Ross Mathew C.5ORCID,Sinjab Ansam4ORCID,Zhou Tieling4ORCID,Chen Minyue6ORCID,Tarifa Reischle Inti2ORCID,Feng Jiping4ORCID,Chukwuocha Chidera2ORCID,Tang Elizabeth7ORCID,Abaya Camille8ORCID,Lim Jamie K.9ORCID,Leung Cheuk Hong4ORCID,Lin Heather Y.4ORCID,Deboever Nathaniel10ORCID,Lee Jack J.1ORCID,Sepesi Boris4ORCID,Gibbons Don L.4ORCID,Wargo Jennifer A.4ORCID,Fujimoto Junya11ORCID,Wang Linghua1ORCID,Petrosino Joseph F.12ORCID,Ajami Nadim J.13ORCID,Jenq Robert R.14ORCID,Moghaddam Seyed Javad1ORCID,Cascone Tina13ORCID,Hoffman Kristi5ORCID,Kadara Humam4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, United States

2. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, United States

3. University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States

4. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, United States

5. Baylor College of Medicine, United States

6. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, United States

7. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, United States

8. Trinity University, United States

9. Johns Hopkins University, United States

10. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, United States

11. Hiroshima University Hospital, Hiroshima, Hiroshima, Japan

12. Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States

13. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, United States

14. City Of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, CA, United States

Abstract

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 associated with tobacco-associated lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) in a human-relevant mouse model. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the loss of the antimicrobial protein Lcn2 in these mice, exacerbates pro-tumor inflammatory phenotypes while further reducing microbial diversity. Yet, how gut microbiome alterations impinge on LUAD development remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the role of gut microbiome changes in LUAD development using fecal microbiota transfer and delineated a pathway by which gut microbiome alterations incurred by loss of Lcn2 fostered the proliferation of pro-inflammatory bacteria of the genus Alistipes, triggering gut inflammation. This inflammation propagated systemically, exerting immunosuppression within the tumor microenvironment, augmenting tumor growth through an IL-6-dependent mechanism and dampening response to immunotherapy. Corroborating our preclinical findings, we found that patients with LUAD 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 LUAD and present new potential targets for interception and therapy.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

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