Authors: Redenti et al.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08033-4
Central Idea: This study engineers a probiotic E. coli Nissle 1917 strain to deliver tumor-specific neoantigens, creating a potent in situ cancer vaccine. This engineered probiotic effectively stimulates anti-tumor immunity and controls or eliminates tumor growth in mouse models of colorectal cancer and melanoma.
Key Concepts:
- Neoantigen-based vaccines: Neoantigens are tumor-specific mutations, making them ideal targets for immunotherapy. Existing neoantigen vaccine approaches have shown limited efficacy.
- Engineered E. coli vector: Researchers modified E. coli Nissle 1917 to enhance neoantigen production and delivery. Key modifications include removing cryptic plasmids and Lon/OmpT proteases, increasing phagocytosis susceptibility, and expressing listeriolysin O (LLO).
- Enhanced neoantigen production: Removing proteases and cryptic plasmids significantly boosted neoantigen expression within the bacteria.
- Improved antigen presentation: Increased phagocytosis and LLO expression enhanced neoantigen uptake and presentation by antigen-presenting cells (APCs), including MHC class I presentation via cytosolic delivery.
- Antitumor efficacy: The engineered E. coli vaccine elicited potent T cell responses, controlled tumor growth, and even eradicated tumors in both primary and metastatic tumor models. Intravenous administration proved effective, overcoming limitations of direct tumor injection.
- Systemic anti-tumor immunity: The vaccine induced systemic anti-tumor immunity, enabling the elimination of distant, untreated tumors.
- Favorable safety profile: The engineered bacteria exhibited reduced persistence in the bloodstream and minimal side effects compared to wild-type E. coli.
Further Research/Unanswered Questions:
- Optimizing neoantigen selection: Refining neoantigen prediction algorithms and selection criteria for maximal immunogenicity.
- Clinical translation: Evaluating the safety and efficacy of this approach in human clinical trials.
- Combination therapies: Exploring the potential for synergy with other immunotherapies, such as checkpoint inhibitors or adoptive cell therapies.
- Long-term immunity and durability of response: Assessing the duration of anti-tumor immunity and the potential for tumor recurrence.
- Broader applicability: Testing the effectiveness against other cancer types.
- Manufacturing and scalability: Developing scalable manufacturing processes for clinical use.
- Microbiome impact: Investigating the long-term impact of the engineered bacteria on the gut microbiome.