A responder-informed gut microbial consortium enhances anti-PD-1 efficacy in a mouse cancer model.
1/5 보강
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), particularly anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) therapy, have improved cancer treatment outcomes, yet durable benefit is achieved in only a subset of pati
APA
Jeong UJ, Ali M, et al. (2026). A responder-informed gut microbial consortium enhances anti-PD-1 efficacy in a mouse cancer model.. Microbiome research reports, 5(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.20517/mrr.2025.117
MLA
Jeong UJ, et al.. "A responder-informed gut microbial consortium enhances anti-PD-1 efficacy in a mouse cancer model.." Microbiome research reports, vol. 5, no. 1, 2026, pp. 2.
PMID
42007374 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), particularly anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) therapy, have improved cancer treatment outcomes, yet durable benefit is achieved in only a subset of patients. Growing evidence implicates the gut microbiome as a modulator of ICI responsiveness, but defined and experimentally validated microbial strategies remain limited. This study aimed to identify responder-associated gut microbes and to evaluate a defined bacterial consortium for enhancing PD-1 blockade efficacy. Publicly available shotgun metagenomic datasets from anti-PD-1-treated cancer patients were re-analyzed to compare gut microbiome profiles between responders and non-responders. Bacterial taxa reproducibly enriched in responders were selected based on consistency across analytical criteria and cultivability and assembled into a four-strain consortium (UJ-04). The immune-adjuvant potential of UJ-04, alone or combined with anti-PD-1 therapy, was evaluated in a B16-F10 melanoma mouse model, with tumor growth and immune responses assessed by flow cytometry. Metagenomic re-analysis identified four commensal bacterial taxa consistently enriched in responder patients, forming the defined UJ-04 consortium. While UJ-04 alone showed minimal antitumor activity, combination treatment with anti-PD-1 significantly enhanced tumor growth inhibition compared with anti-PD-1 monotherapy. This effect was accompanied by increased intratumoral CD8 T cells and natural killer cells, with concordant immune trends in peripheral compartments. A responder-informed, defined microbial consortium functionally translates clinical microbiome associations into validation and enhances PD-1 blockade efficacy by modulating host antitumor immunity. These findings support defined bacterial consortia as microbiome-based immunomodulatory adjuncts for immunotherapy.
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