Engineered skin bacteria induce antitumor T cell responses against melanoma

Y. Erin Chen(San Francisco VA Health Care System), Djenet Bousbaine(Stanford University), Alessandra Veinbachs(Stanford University), Katayoon Atabakhsh(Stanford University), Alex Dimas(Stanford University), Victor K. Yu(Stanford University), Aishan Zhao(Stanford University), Nora J. Enright(Stanford University), Kazuki Nagashima(Stanford University), Yasmine Belkaid(National Institutes of Health), Michael A. Fischbach(Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (United States))
Science
April 13, 2023
Cited by 179Open Access
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Abstract

Certain bacterial colonists induce a highly specific T cell response. A hallmark of this encounter is that adaptive immunity develops preemptively, in the absence of an infection. However, the functional properties of colonist-induced T cells are not well defined, limiting our ability to understand anticommensal immunity and harness it therapeutically. We addressed both challenges by engineering the skin bacterium Staphylococcus epidermidis to express tumor antigens anchored to secreted or cell-surface proteins. Upon colonization, engineered S. epidermidis elicits tumor-specific T cells that circulate, infiltrate local and metastatic lesions, and exert cytotoxic activity. Thus, the immune response to a skin colonist can promote cellular immunity at a distal site and can be redirected against a target of therapeutic interest by expressing a target-derived antigen in a commensal.


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