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Description

T cell infiltration of solid tumors is associated with favorable patient outcomes, yet the mechanisms underlying variable immune responses between individuals are not well understood. One possible modulator could be the intestinal microbiota. We compared melanoma growth in mice harboring distinct commensal microbiota and observed differences in spontaneous antitumor immunity, which were eliminated upon cohousing or after fecal transfer. Sequencing of the 16S ribosomal RNA identified Bifidobacterium as associated with the antitumor effects. Oral administration of Bifidobacterium alone improved tumor control to the same degree as programmed cell death protein 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1)-specific antibody therapy (checkpoint blockade), and combination treatment nearly abolished tumor outgrowth. Augmented dendritic cell function leading to enhanced CD8(+) T cell priming and accumulation in the tumor microenvironment mediated the effect. Our data suggest that manipulating the microbiota may modulate cancer immunotherapy.

Summary

Project accession BioProject accession Keywords PMID #Samples
SRP064488 PRJNA297465 Feces C57BL/6 The Jackson Laboratory Taconic Biosciences Laboratory 26541606 5

Alpha diversity

Samples

Sample accession Project accession Sampling location Genotype Vendor Origin
SRS1099751 SRP064488 Feces C57BL/6 The Jackson Laboratory Laboratory
SRS1099750 SRP064488 Feces C57BL/6 The Jackson Laboratory Laboratory
SRS1099749 SRP064488 Feces C57BL/6 The Jackson Laboratory Laboratory
SRS1099729 SRP064488 Feces C57BL/6 Taconic Biosciences Laboratory
SRS1099728 SRP064488 Feces C57BL/6 Taconic Biosciences Laboratory

Reference

Sivan, Ayelet, et al. "Commensal Bifidobacterium promotes antitumor immunity and facilitates anti–PD-L1 efficacy." Science 350.6264 (2015): 1084-1089.