Microbial-derived immunostimulatory small molecule augments anti-PD-1 therapy in lung cancer
作者
Rachel C. Newsome,Huijia Liu,Bright Agbodzi,Raad Z. Gharaibeh,Liang Zhou,Christian Jobin,Rachel C. Newsome,Huijia Liu,Bright Agbodzi,Raad Z. Gharaibeh,Liang Zhou,Christian Jobin
We previously showed that enrichment of the Bacteroides genus is associated with improved anti-PD-1-mediated tumor therapy. Here, we isolate 183 Bacteroides isolates from the feces of humanized anti-PD-1 responder mice. Supernatants from 6 of 183 isolates stimulate IFNγ production from primary CD8+ T cells. These six isolates (6-consort) enhance anti-PD-1-induced anti-tumor efficacy in syngeneic and orthotopic lung cancer models compared to non-responder feces-colonized mice, an effect dependent on the production of IFNγ. Bioassay-guided fractionation and comparative metabolomics lead to the discovery of an active N-acyl amide (cis-Bac429) produced by Bacteroides. cis-Bac429 stimulates IFNγ production by CD8+ T cells but not synthetic saturated Bac429 (sat-Bac429), indicating structural specificity. Intratumorally administered cis-Bac429, but not sat-Bac429, significantly decreases subcutaneous lung and colon tumor growth in combination with anti-PD-1 therapy and drives IFNγ+ CD8+ T cell tumor infiltration. These findings pave the way for development of Bacteroides-type N-acyl-amides as adjuvant treatments for anti-PD-1-refractory NSCLC.