摘要:短暂的微生物群消耗增强粘膜CD8 t细胞反应

Simone Becattini, A. Louie, I. Leiner, E. Pamer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

CD8+组织常驻记忆t细胞(Trm)可以在外周器官中立即被激活,与循环t细胞相比,它具有更强的保护潜力。Trm代表了抗肿瘤免疫的潜在参与者,可能会提高癌症疫苗的有效性。疫苗接种策略增加了皮肤或生殖道中Trm细胞的积累,增强了体内对组织特异性病原体的保护。然而,到目前为止,还没有提出具体的方法来加强肠黏膜中的Trm。微生物群塑造了宿主免疫群体的组成和功能,特别是在肠组织中,它决定了常规t细胞和调节性t细胞之间的比例。这表明可能利用共生群落的调节来增加肠道驻留CD8 t细胞的数量和功能。单核细胞增生李斯特菌减毒株被用于临床试验,以促进对肿瘤抗原的免疫,并已被口服给健康志愿者,以促进粘膜免疫,证明了这种方法的安全性。开发基于口服李斯特菌载体的更有效的粘膜疫苗接种策略,将对对抗胃肠道肿瘤(如正在发现新抗原的结直肠癌)产生重大影响。基于我们最近的观察,抗生素治疗有利于李斯特菌的肠道扩张,我们设计了一种口服免疫策略(TMDI,免疫前短暂菌群消耗),包括在单剂量抗生素治疗后口服接种携带抗原的李斯特菌菌株。在小鼠中,TMDI促进了工程无毒李斯特菌菌株的扩增,导致抗原特异性CD8+ Trm种群的显著扩增(约20倍),另外还显示出强大的效应功能。用这种方法免疫的小鼠在高剂量病原体再次攻击时表现出增强的保护作用。我们发现t细胞积累的增加依赖于抗原负荷的增加和更强的炎症刺激;令人惊讶的是,即使将载体在肠道内强制维持高水平数周,诱导的CD8+ Trm细胞也没有表现出任何衰竭的迹象,并在抗原刺激下保持了快速产生炎症细胞因子的能力。总之,我们已经确定了一种新的策略,通过在免疫时调节微生物群密度来利用组织驻留CD8 t细胞对抗选择的表位,并建立了一个系统来剖析在肠道中获得有效t细胞反应的要求。该工具可用于设计针对肠道肿瘤的改良疫苗。引文格式:Simone Becattini, Alexander Louie, ingrid M. Leiner, Eric Pamer。短暂的菌群耗竭增强粘膜CD8 t细胞反应[摘要]。第四届CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR国际癌症免疫治疗会议:将科学转化为生存;2018年9月30日至10月3日;纽约,纽约。费城(PA): AACR;癌症免疫学杂志,2019;7(2增刊):摘要nr A170。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Abstract A170: Transient microbiota depletion enhances mucosal CD8 T-cell responses
CD8+ tissue resident memory T-cells (Trm) are poised for immediate reactivation in peripheral organs and have enhanced protective potential in comparison to circulating T-cells. Trm represent potential players in antitumor immunity that might be enhance the effectiveness of cancer vaccines. Vaccination strategies increasing accumulation of Trm cells in skin or in the genital tract augmented protection against tissue-specific pathogens in vivo. However, to date, no specific approach has been proposed to reinforce Trm in the intestinal mucosa. The microbiota shapes composition and functions of host immune populations, particularly in the intestinal tissue, where it determines the ratio between conventional and regulatory T-cells. This suggests that modulation of commensal communities might be exploited to augment numbers and function of gut-resident CD8 T-cells. Listeria monocytogenes attenuated strains are employed in clinical trials to promote immunity against tumor antigens and have been administered orally to healthy volunteers to promote mucosal immunity, proving safety of this approach. Developing more effective mucosal vaccination strategies based on oral administration of Listeria-based vectors, would have a great impact in the fight against tumors of the gastrointestinal tract, such as colorectal cancer, for which neoantigens are being discovered. Based on our recent observation that antibiotic treatment favors intestinal expansion of Listeria, we have devised an oral immunization strategy (TMDI, Transient Microbiota Depletion prior to Immunization) consisting of oral vaccination with an antigen-carrying Listeria strain following administration of a single dose of antibiotics. In mice, TMDI promoted expansion of engineered avirulent Listeria strains, resulting in striking expansion of the antigen-specific CD8+ Trm population (~20 fold), that additionally displayed potent effector functions. Mice immunized with this approach showed augmented protection upon rechallenge with high doses of pathogen.We found that increased accumulation of T-cells was dependent on both increased antigen load and stronger inflammatory stimuli; surprisingly, even when the vector was forcedly maintained at high levels in the intestinal lumen for several weeks, the elicited CD8+ Trm cells did not show any sign of exhaustion and retained the capacity to rapidly produce inflammatory cytokines upon antigen stimulation. In conclusion, we have identified a novel strategy to harness tissue resident CD8 T-cells against an epitope of choice by modulating microbiota density at the time of immunization, and set up a system to dissect the requirements for obtaining potent T-cell responses in the intestine. This tool can potentially be utilized to design improved vaccines against tumors of the intestinal tract. Citation Format: Simone Becattini, Alexander Louie, Ingrd M. Leiner, Eric Pamer. Transient microbiota depletion enhances mucosal CD8 T-cell responses [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr A170.
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