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Data from Lower Airway Dysbiosis Affects Lung Cancer Progression

Authors :
Leopoldo N. Segal
Thales Papagiannakopoulos
Kwok-Kin Wong
Richard Bonneau
Huilin Li
Jose C. Clemente
Harvey I. Pass
Daniel H. Sterman
William N. Rom
Adriana Heguy
Aristotelis Tsirigos
William Moore
Andre L. Moreira
Cynthia A. Loomis
Valeria Mezzano
Sergei B. Koralov
Anastasia-Maria Zavitsanou
Ray Pillai
Kevin Felner
Harald Sauthoff
Robert L. Smith
Jamie L. Bessich
Samaan Rafeq
Gaetane Michaud
Linchen He
Nan Shen
James T. Morton
Michelle Badri
Mariam El-Ashmawy
Tadasu Iizumi
Joseph Carpenito
Brendan Franca
Luisannay Perez
Evan Olsen
Peter Meyn
Ting-An Yie
Yonghua Li
Rosemary Schluger
Katherine Gershner
Imran Sulaiman
Benjamin G. Wu
Jun-Chieh J. Tsay
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

In lung cancer, enrichment of the lower airway microbiota with oral commensals commonly occurs, and ex vivo models support that some of these bacteria can trigger host transcriptomic signatures associated with carcinogenesis. Here, we show that this lower airway dysbiotic signature was more prevalent in the stage IIIB–IV tumor–node–metastasis lung cancer group and is associated with poor prognosis, as shown by decreased survival among subjects with early-stage disease (I–IIIA) and worse tumor progression as measured by RECIST scores among subjects with stage IIIB–IV disease. In addition, this lower airway microbiota signature was associated with upregulation of the IL17, PI3K, MAPK, and ERK pathways in airway transcriptome, and we identified Veillonella parvula as the most abundant taxon driving this association. In a KP lung cancer model, lower airway dysbiosis with V. parvula led to decreased survival, increased tumor burden, IL17 inflammatory phenotype, and activation of checkpoint inhibitor markers.Significance:Multiple lines of investigation have shown that the gut microbiota affects host immune response to immunotherapy in cancer. Here, we support that the local airway microbiota modulates the host immune tone in lung cancer, affecting tumor progression and prognosis.See related commentary by Zitvogel and Kroemer, p. 224.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 211

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4661dacabf76498f52c10e3d10efe956