OncoImmunology (Dec 2024)
Estrogen-related differences in antitumor immunity and gut microbiome contribute to sexual dimorphism of colorectal cancer
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a multifaceted disease whose development and progression varies depending on tumor location, age of patients, infiltration of immune cells within cancer lesions, and the tumor microenvironment. These pathophysiological characteristics are additionally influenced by sex-related differences. The gut microbiome plays a role in initiation and progression of CRC, and shapes anti-tumor immune responses but how responsiveness of the immune system to the intestinal microbiota may contribute to sexual dimorphism of CRC is largely unknown. We studied survival, tumor-infiltrating immune cell populations and tumor-associated microbiome of a cohort of n = 184 male and female CRC patients through high-dimensional single-cell flow cytometry and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We functionally tested the immune system-microbiome interactions in in-vivo and in-vitro models of the disease. High-dimensional single-cell flow cytometry showed that female patients are enriched by tumor-infiltrating invariant Natural Killer T (iNKT) cells but depleted by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. The enrichment of oral pathobionts and a reduction of β-glucuronidase activity are distinctive traits characterizing the gut microbiome of female patients affected by CRC. Functional assays using a collection of human primary iNKT cell lines demonstrated that the gut microbiota of female patients functionally impairs iNKT cell anti-tumor functions interfering with the granzyme-perforin cytotoxic pathway. Our results highlight a sex-dependent functional relationship between the gut microbiome, estrogen metabolism, and the decline of cytotoxic T cell responses, contributing to the sexual dimorphism observed in CRC patients with relevant implications for precision medicine and the design of targeted therapeutic approaches addressing sex bias in cancer.
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