The Gut Microbiome Controls Liver Tumors via the Vagus Nerve

Kylynda C. Bauer(National Institutes of Health), Rajiv Trehan(National Institutes of Health), Benjamin Ruf(National Institutes of Health), Yuta Myojin(National Institutes of Health), Mohamed-Reda Benmebarek(National Institutes of Health), Chi Ma(National Institutes of Health), Matthias Seifert(National Institutes of Health), Amran Nur(National Institutes of Health), Jonathan Qi(National Institutes of Health), Patrick Huang(National Institutes of Health), Marlaine Soliman(National Institutes of Health), Benjamin L. Green(National Institutes of Health), Simon Wabitsch(National Institutes of Health), Danielle Springer(National Heart Lung and Blood Institute), Francisco Rodríguez-Matos(National Institutes of Health), Shadin Ghabra(National Institutes of Health), Stephanie N. Gregory(Center for Cancer Research), Jennifer Matta(Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research), Brian Dawson, Jihye L. Golino(National Institutes of Health), Changqing Xie(National Institutes of Health), Amiran Dzutsev(Center for Cancer Research), Giorgio Trinchieri(Center for Cancer Research), Firouzeh Korangy(National Institutes of Health), Tim F. Greten(National Institutes of Health)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
January 25, 2024
Cited by 13Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Liver cancer ranks amongst the deadliest cancers. Nerves have emerged as an understudied regulator of tumor progression. The parasympathetic vagus nerve influences systemic immunity via acetylcholine (ACh). Whether cholinergic neuroimmune interactions influence hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains uncertain. Liver denervation via hepatic vagotomy (HV) significantly reduced liver tumor burden, while pharmacological enhancement of parasympathetic tone promoted tumor growth. Cholinergic disruption in Rag1KO mice revealed that cholinergic regulation requires adaptive immunity. Further scRNA-seq and in vitro studies indicated that vagal ACh dampens CD8+ T cell activity via muscarinic ACh receptor (AChR) CHRM3. Depletion of CD8+ T cells abrogated HV outcomes and selective deletion of Chrm3 on CD8 + T cells inhibited liver tumor growth. Beyond tumor-specific outcomes, vagotomy improved cancer-associated fatigue and anxiety-like behavior. As microbiota transplantation from HCC donors was sufficient to impair behavior, we investigated putative microbiota-neuroimmune crosstalk. Tumor, rather than vagotomy, robustly altered fecal bacterial composition, increasing Desulfovibrionales and Clostridial taxa. Strikingly, in tumor-free mice, vagotomy permitted HCC-associated microbiota to activate hepatic CD8+ T cells. These findings reveal that gut bacteria influence behavior and liver anti-tumor immunity via a dynamic and pharmaceutically targetable, vagus-liver axis.


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