EMBO Molecular Medicine (Nov 2024)

Salmonella cancer therapy metabolically disrupts tumours at the collateral cost of T cell immunity

  • Alastair Copland,
  • Gillian M Mackie,
  • Lisa Scarfe,
  • Elizabeth Jinks,
  • David A J Lecky,
  • Nancy Gudgeon,
  • Riahne McQuade,
  • Masahiro Ono,
  • Manja Barthel,
  • Wolf-Dietrich Hardt,
  • Hiroshi Ohno,
  • Wilma H M Hoevenaar,
  • Sarah Dimeloe,
  • David Bending,
  • Kendle M Maslowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44321-024-00159-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 12
pp. 3057 – 3088

Abstract

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Abstract Bacterial cancer therapy (BCT) is a promising therapeutic for solid tumours. Salmonella enterica Typhimurium (STm) is well-studied amongst bacterial vectors due to advantages in genetic modification and metabolic adaptation. A longstanding paradox is the redundancy of T cells for treatment efficacy; instead, STm BCT depends on innate phagocytes for tumour control. Here, we used distal T cell receptor (TCR) and IFNγ reporter mice (Nr4a3-Tocky-Ifnγ-YFP) and a colorectal cancer (CRC) model to interrogate T cell activity during BCT with attenuated STm. We found that colonic tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) exhibited a variety of activation defects, including IFN-γ production decoupled from TCR signalling, decreased polyfunctionality and reduced central memory (TCM) formation. Modelling of T-cell–tumour interactions with a tumour organoid platform revealed an intact TCR signalosome, but paralysed metabolic reprogramming due to inhibition of the master metabolic controller, c-Myc. Restoration of c-Myc by deletion of the bacterial asparaginase ansB reinvigorated T cell activation, but at the cost of decreased metabolic control of the tumour by STm. This work shows for the first time that T cells are metabolically defective during BCT, but also that this same phenomenon is inexorably tied to intrinsic tumour suppression by the bacterial vector.

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