Gut microbiota-derived hexa-acylated lipopolysaccharides enhance cancer immunotherapy responses
六边形
癌症免疫疗法
肠道菌群
免疫疗法
癌症
生物
化学
免疫学
计算生物学
生物化学
遗传学
作者
Puspendu Sardar,Benjamin S. Beresford-Jones,Wangmingyu Xia,Omar Shabana,Satoshi Suyama,Rúben J. Ramos,Amelia T. Soderholm,Panagiotis Tourlomousis,Paula Kuo,Alexander C. Evans,Charlotte J. Imianowski,Alberto G. Conti,Alexander J. Wesolowski,N. Baker,Emily McCord,Klaus Okkenhaug,Sarah K. Whiteside,Rahul Roychoudhuri,Clare Bryant,Justin R. Cross,Virginia A. Pedicord
The gut microbiome modulates immunotherapy treatment responses, and this may explain why immune checkpoint inhibitors, such as anti-PD-1, are only effective in some patients. Previous studies correlated lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-producing gut microbes with poorer prognosis; however, LPS from diverse bacterial species can range from immunostimulatory to inhibitory. Here, by functionally analysing faecal metagenomes from 112 patients with melanoma, we found that a subset of LPS-producing bacteria encoding immunostimulatory hexa-acylated LPS was enriched in microbiomes of clinical responders. In an implanted tumour mouse model of anti-PD-1 treatment, microbiota-derived hexa-acylated LPS was required for effective anti-tumour immune responses, and LPS-binding antibiotics and a small-molecule TLR4 antagonist abolished anti-PD-1 efficacy. Conversely, oral administration of hexa-acylated LPS to mice significantly augmented anti-PD-1-mediated anti-tumour immunity. Penta-acylated LPS did not improve anti-PD-1 efficacy in vivo and inhibited hexa-acylated LPS-induced immune activation in vitro. Microbiome hexa-acylated LPS therefore represents an accessible predictor and potential enhancer of immunotherapy responses.