| Literature DB >> 32522267 |
Zhujiang Dai1, Jingqiu Zhang2, Qi Wu1, Huiwen Fang1, Chunfeng Shi1, Zhen Li1, Chaobiao Lin1, Dong Tang3, Daorong Wang4.
Abstract
Cancer displays high levels of heterogeneity and mutation potential, and curing cancer remains a challenge that clinicians and researchers are eager to overcome. In recent years, the emergence of cancer immunotherapy has brought hope to many patients with cancer. Cancer immunotherapy reactivates the immune function of immune cells by blocking immune checkpoints, thereby restoring the anti-tumor activity of immune cells. However, immune-related adverse events are a common complication of checkpoint blockade, which might be caused by the physiological role of checkpoint pathways in regulating adaptive immunity and preventing autoimmunity. In this context, the intestinal microbiota has shown great potential in the immunotherapy of cancer. The intestinal microbiota not only regulates the immune function of the body, but also optimizes the therapeutic effect of immune checkpoint inhibitors, thus reducing the occurrence of complications. Therefore, manipulating the intestinal microbiota is expected to enhance the effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors and reduce adverse reactions, which will lead to new breakthroughs in immunotherapy and cancer management. Video abstract.Entities:
Keywords: CTLA-4; Cancer immunotherapy; Checkpoint; FMT; ICIs; Microbiota; PD-1; PD-L1
Year: 2020 PMID: 32522267 PMCID: PMC7288675 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-020-00599-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Fig. 1TLRs and NLRs effectively regulate intestinal immune function. The lack of the TLR adapter MYD88 will alter the composition of the microbiota, resulting in an increase in the amount of the mucus-associated microbiota. The lack of nucleoside-binding oligomeric domain protein 1 (NOD1) leads to an increase in the size of the of microbiota, including increased numbers of Clostridium, Bacteroides, segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB), and Enterobacteriaceae. Lack of NOD2 also leads to an increase in the size of the mucus-associated microbiota, which induces inflammation and colorectal cancer. The microbiota produce metabolites that activate NOD-, LRR-, and pyrin domain-containing 6 (NLRP6) and secretes interleukin (IL)-18, which maintains the stability of the mucus, and antimicrobial peptides. Activation of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) promotes the differentiation of CD4+ T cells into T helper (Th) cells and regulatory T cells (Tregs). Th cells regulate the function of the intestinal microbiota via the expression of immunoglobulin A (IgA). Furthermore, the secretion of IgA is regulated by the specific binding of PD-1 on the surface of Th cells to PD-L1 on the surface of B cells
Fig. 2The regulation of the microbiota in adaptive immunity. Bacteroides fragilis stimulates TLR2 on CD4+ T cells by producing polysaccharide A (PSA), thereby enhancing the expression of Forkhead Box P3 (Foxp3), IL-10, and TGF-β. Butyrate activates Foxp3 via a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), induces differentiation of Tregs, and inhibits anti-tumor immune responses. Butyrate also indirectly promotes Treg differentiation by inducing IECs to secrete TGF-β. High concentrations of TGF-β inhibit the expression of IL-23R and promote the differentiation of Tregs. TGF-β also induces RORγt to be expressed together with Foxp3 in CD4+ T cells, which in turn inhibits RORγt, leading to differentiation of Tregs. Microbial metabolites SCFA and PSA can promote the proliferation of induced regulatory T cells (iTregs); however, too many iTregs infiltrating tumor tissue will weaken cancer immunity. PD-L1 can also promote the conversion of Tregs to iTregs by increasing the expression of Foxp3 and PTEN, or by inhibiting the Akt/mTOR pathway
Regulation of intestinal microbiota in cancer immunotherapy
| Microbiota | Immune regulation | Impact on cancer immunotherapy |
|---|---|---|
| Bifidobacteria | Promoting maturation of DCs Activating lymphocytes Upregulating IFN-γ and increasing pro-inflammatory cytokine Initiating the proliferation of tumor-specific CD8+ T cells | Enhancing PD-1 blockade |
Activating Th1 cells Promoting Tregs proliferation Promoting maturation of DCs | Enhancing CTLA-4 blockade | |
| A. muciniphila | Increasing CXCR3+CCR9+CD4+ T cells | Enhancing PD-1 blockade |
Escherichia Clostridium | Inducing the differentiation of Tregs and inhibiting inflammation | Enhancing CTLA-4 blockade |
| Faecalibacterium | Promoting the proliferation of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells Promoting the production of Tregs and upregulating the expression of ICOS | Enhancing PD-1 blockade Enhancing CTLA-4 blockade |
| Bacteroides | Upregulating the system’s MDSC and Tregs Causing a systemic inflammatory response through the TLR-NF inflammatory pathway | Impeding PD-1 blockade Impeding CTLA-4 blockade |
| microbial-derived SCFAs | Promoting the differentiation of Tregs | Enhancing CTLA-4 blockade |
Fig. 3The mechanism of multiple intestinal microbiota in cancer immunotherapy. Bifidobacteria activates and causes DCs to secrete IFN-γ, which initiates the anti-tumor effect of CD8+ T cells. B. fragilis promotes Th1 recognition of tumor antigens and is capable of inducing DC maturation. In addition, B. fragilis can promote the differentiation of CD4+ T cells into Tregs, which further participate in anti-tumor immunity. Faecalibacterium induces DC maturation and promotes CD4+ T cell proliferation. A. muciniphila promotes activation of the CXCR3/CCR9 axis and participates in the migration of CD4+ T cells. Escherichia and Clostridium enhance the expression of CTLA-4 in Tregs, which is beneficial to tumor immunity
FDA-approved trials of microbial-related immunotherapy
| NCT Number | Title | Status | Conditions | Interventions | Phases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02960282 | Gut Microbiome in Fecal Samples From Patients With Metastatic Cancer Undergoing Chemotherapy or Immunotherapy | Recruiting | Metastatic Carcinoma Stage IV/IVA/IVB Colorectal Cancer | Procedure: Biospecimen Collection Other: Laboratory Biomarker Analysis | |
| NCT03341143 | Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) in Melanoma Patients | Recruiting | Melanoma | FMT with Pembrolizumab | Phase 2 |
| NCT03353402 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) in Metastatic Melanoma Patients Who Failed Immunotherapy | Recruiting | Melanoma Stage IV Unresectable Stage III Melanoma | FMT | Phase 1 |
| NCT03370861 | How Microbes and Metabolism May Predict Skin Cancer Immunotherapy Outcomes | Recruiting | Skin Cancer|Melanoma Merkel Cell Carcinoma Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Skin Basal Cell Carcinoma | Immunotherapy | |
| NCT03383107 | Effect of Radiotherapy Variables on Circulating Effectors of Immune Response and Local Microbiome | Recruiting | Breast Cancer|Prostate Cancer | ||
| NCT03557749 | Monitoring of Immune and Microbial Reconstitution in (HCT) and Novel Immunotherapies | Recruiting | Immune and Microbial Reconstitution Recurrent Malignant Cell Therapy/Immunotherapy Patients | Diagnostic Test: Blood Sample/Stool Sample Gastrointestinal biopsy × 2–4/ Apheresis Product/Final cellular product | |
| NCT03595683 | Pembrolizumab and EDP1503 in Advanced Melanoma | Recruiting | Melanoma (Skin)|Melanoma | Pembrolizumab Biological: EDP1503 | Phase 2 |
| NCT03643289 | Predicting Response to Immunotherapy for Melanoma With Gut Microbiome and Metabolomics | Recruiting | Melanoma (Skin) | ||
| NCT03686202 | Feasibility Study of Microbial Ecosystem Therapeutics (MET-4) to Evaluate Effects of Fecal Microbiome in Patients on Immunotherapy | Recruiting | All Solid Tumors | Biological: MET-4 | Early Phase 1 |
| NCT03772899 | Fecal Microbial Transplantation in Combination With Immunotherapy in Melanoma Patients (MIMic) | Recruiting | Melanoma | FMT | Phase 1 |
| NCT03797170 | Design of New Personalized Therapeutic Approaches for Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma | Recruiting | Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma | Gut microbiota samples | |
| NCT03817125 | Melanoma Checkpoint and Gut Microbiome Alteration With Microbiome Intervention | Recruiting | Metastatic Melanoma | Placebo for antibiotic Vancomycin pretreatment Nivolumab/SER-401/SER-401 | Phase 1 |
| NCT03891979 | Gut Microbiome Modulation to Enable Efficacy of Checkpoint-based Immunotherapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma | Not yet recruiting | Pancreatic Cancer | Antibiotics and Pembrolizumab | Phase 4 |
Fig. 4Differences in microbial enrichment during immunotherapy. The Circos diagram illustrates the different effects of different members of the microbiota in the treatment of ICIs. Blue bands represent members of the microbiota that are enriched during the treatment of effective ICIs. Red bands represent members of the microbiota that are enriched during the treatment of ineffective ICIs. The numbers in parentheses are the source of the reference. (1) Chaput et al. [111] (2) Frankel et al. [115] (3) Gopalakrishnan et al. [123] (4) Matson et al. [122] (5) Routy et al. [155] (6) Routy et al. [113]. (7) Temraz et al. [156]