Oncogenesis (Apr 2024)

Acidovorax temperans skews neutrophil maturation and polarizes Th17 cells to promote lung adenocarcinoma development

  • Joshua K. Stone,
  • Natalia von Muhlinen,
  • Chenran Zhang,
  • Ana I. Robles,
  • Amy L. Flis,
  • Eleazar Vega-Valle,
  • Akihiko Miyanaga,
  • Masaru Matsumoto,
  • K. Leigh Greathouse,
  • Tomer Cooks,
  • Giorgio Trinchieri,
  • Curtis C. Harris

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41389-024-00513-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Change within the intratumoral microbiome is a common feature in lung and other cancers and may influence inflammation and immunity in the tumor microenvironment, affecting growth and metastases. We previously characterized the lung cancer microbiome in patients and identified Acidovorax temperans as enriched in tumors. Here, we instilled A. temperans in an animal model driven by mutant K-ras and Tp53. This revealed A. temperans accelerates tumor development and burden through infiltration of proinflammatory cells. Neutrophils exposed to A. temperans displayed a mature, pro-tumorigenic phenotype with increased cytokine signaling, with a global shift away from IL-1β signaling. Neutrophil to monocyte and macrophage signaling upregulated MHC II to activate CD4+ T cells, polarizing them to an IL-17A+ phenotype detectable in CD4+ and γδ populations (T17). These T17 cells shared a common gene expression program predictive of poor survival in human LUAD. These data indicate bacterial exposure promotes tumor growth by modulating inflammation.