The gut microbiome enhances breast cancer immunotherapy following bariatric surgery.

IF 6.3 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
JCI insight Pub Date : 2025-04-24 eCollection Date: 2025-06-09 DOI:10.1172/jci.insight.187683
Margaret S Bohm, Sydney C Joseph, Laura M Sipe, Minjeong Kim, Cameron T Leathem, Tahliyah S Mims, Nathaniel B Willis, Ubaid A Tanveer, Joel H Elasy, Emily W Grey, Madeline E Pye, Zeid T Mustafa, Barbara Anne Harper, Logan G McGrath, Deidre Daria, Brenda Landvoigt Schmitt, Jelissa A Myers, Patricia Pantoja Newman, Brandt D Pence, Marie Van der Merwe, Matthew J Davis, Joseph F Pierre, Liza Makowski
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Bariatric surgery is associated with improved breast cancer (BC) outcomes, including greater immunotherapy effectiveness in a preclinical BC model. A potential mechanism of bariatric surgery-associated protection is the gut microbiota. Here, we demonstrate the dependency of improved immunotherapy response on the post-bariatric surgery gut microbiome via fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT). Response to αPD-1 immunotherapy was significantly improved following FMT from formerly obese bariatric surgery-treated mice. When stool from post-bariatric surgery patients was transplanted into recipient mice and compared to the patients' presurgery transplants, postsurgery microbes significantly reduced tumor burden and doubled immunotherapy effectiveness. Microbes impact tumor burden through microbially derived metabolites, including branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs). Circulating BCAAs correlated significantly with natural killer T (NKT) cell content in the tumor microenvironment in donor mice after bariatric surgery and FMT recipients of donor cecal content after bariatric surgery compared with obese controls. BCAA supplementation replicated improved αPD-1 effectiveness in 2 BC models, supporting the role of BCAAs in increased immunotherapy effectiveness after bariatric surgery. Ex vivo exposure increased primary NKT cell expression of antitumor cytokines, demonstrating direct activation of NKT cells by BCAAs. Together, the findings suggest that reinvigorating antitumor immunity may depend on bariatric surgery-associated microbially derived metabolites, namely BCAAs.

肠道微生物组增强了减肥手术后的乳腺癌免疫治疗。
减肥手术与改善乳腺癌(BC)预后相关,包括临床前BC模型中更高的免疫治疗效果。肠道微生物群是减肥手术相关保护的潜在机制。在这里,我们证明了通过粪便微生物移植(FMT)改善免疫治疗反应对减肥手术后肠道微生物组的依赖性。对αPD-1免疫治疗的反应在前肥胖减肥手术治疗小鼠的FMT后显着改善。将减肥手术后患者的粪便移植到受体小鼠体内,与患者术前移植相比,术后微生物显著减轻了肿瘤负担,免疫治疗效果翻了一番。微生物通过包括支链氨基酸(BCAA)在内的微生物衍生代谢物影响肿瘤负荷。与肥胖对照组相比,在减肥手术后供体小鼠和减肥手术后供体盲肠内容物的FMT受体中,循环BCAAs与肿瘤微环境中的自然杀伤T (NKT)细胞含量显著相关。在两种BC模型中,补充BCAA可以改善αPD-1的有效性,支持BCAA在减肥手术后提高免疫治疗效果中的作用。体外暴露增加了原代NKT细胞抗肿瘤细胞因子的表达,表明BCAAs直接激活了NKT细胞。总之,研究结果表明,重新激活抗肿瘤免疫可能依赖于减肥手术相关的微生物衍生代谢物,即支链氨基酸。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JCI insight
JCI insight Medicine-General Medicine
CiteScore
13.70
自引率
1.20%
发文量
543
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: JCI Insight is a Gold Open Access journal with a 2022 Impact Factor of 8.0. It publishes high-quality studies in various biomedical specialties, such as autoimmunity, gastroenterology, immunology, metabolism, nephrology, neuroscience, oncology, pulmonology, and vascular biology. The journal focuses on clinically relevant basic and translational research that contributes to the understanding of disease biology and treatment. JCI Insight is self-published by the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI), a nonprofit honor organization of physician-scientists founded in 1908, and it helps fulfill the ASCI's mission to advance medical science through the publication of clinically relevant research reports.
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