TY - JOUR
T1 - Remodeling the bladder tumor immune microenvironment by mycobacterial species with changes in their cell envelope composition
AU - Senserrich, Jordi
AU - Guallar-Garrido, Sandra
AU - Gomez-Mora, Elisabet
AU - Urrea, Victor
AU - Clotet i Sala, Bonaventura
AU - Julián, Esther
AU - Cabrera, Cecilia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Senserrich, Guallar-Garrido, Gomez-Mora, Urrea, Clotet, Julián and Cabrera.
PY - 2022/10/11
Y1 - 2022/10/11
N2 - Intravesical BCG instillation after bladder tumor resection is the standard treatment for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer; however, it is not always effective and frequently has undesirable side effects. Therefore, new strategies that improve the clinical management of patients are urgently needed. This study aimed to comprehensively evaluate the bladder tumor immune microenvironment profile after intravesical treatment with a panel of mycobacteria with variation in their cell envelope composition and its impact on survival using an orthotopic murine model to identify more effective and safer therapeutic strategies. tumor-bearing mice were intravesically treated with a panel of BCG and M. brumae cultured under different conditions. Untreated tumor-bearing mice and healthy mice were also included as controls. After mycobacterial treatments, the infiltrating immune cell populations in the bladder were analysed by flow cytometry. We provide evidence that mycobacterial treatment triggered a strong immune infiltration into the bladder, with BCG inducing higher global absolute infiltration than M. brumae. The induced global immune microenvironment was strikingly different between the two mycobacterial species, affecting both innate and adaptive immunity. Compared with M. brumae, BCG treated mice exhibited a more robust infiltration of CD4
+ and CD8
+ T-cells skewed toward an effector memory phenotype, with higher frequencies of NKT cells, neutrophils/gMDSCs and monocytes, especially the inflammatory subset, and higher CD4
+ T
EM/CD4
+ T
reg and CD8
+ T
EM/CD4
+ T
reg ratios. Conversely, M. brumae treatment triggered higher proportions of total activated immune cells and activated CD4
+ and CD8
+ T
EM cells and lower ratios of CD4
+ T
EM cells/CD4
+ T
regs, CD8
+ T
EM cells/CD4
+ T
regs and inflammatory/reparative monocytes. Notably, the mycobacterial cell envelope composition in M. brumae had a strong impact on the immune microenvironment, shaping the B and myeloid cell compartment and T-cell maturation profile and thus improving survival. Overall, we demonstrate that the bladder immune microenvironment induced by mycobacterial treatment is species specific and shaped by mycobacterial cell envelope composition. Therefore, the global bladder immune microenvironment can be remodelled, improving the quality of infiltrating immune cells, the balance between inflammatory and regulatory/suppressive responses and increasing survival.
AB - Intravesical BCG instillation after bladder tumor resection is the standard treatment for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer; however, it is not always effective and frequently has undesirable side effects. Therefore, new strategies that improve the clinical management of patients are urgently needed. This study aimed to comprehensively evaluate the bladder tumor immune microenvironment profile after intravesical treatment with a panel of mycobacteria with variation in their cell envelope composition and its impact on survival using an orthotopic murine model to identify more effective and safer therapeutic strategies. tumor-bearing mice were intravesically treated with a panel of BCG and M. brumae cultured under different conditions. Untreated tumor-bearing mice and healthy mice were also included as controls. After mycobacterial treatments, the infiltrating immune cell populations in the bladder were analysed by flow cytometry. We provide evidence that mycobacterial treatment triggered a strong immune infiltration into the bladder, with BCG inducing higher global absolute infiltration than M. brumae. The induced global immune microenvironment was strikingly different between the two mycobacterial species, affecting both innate and adaptive immunity. Compared with M. brumae, BCG treated mice exhibited a more robust infiltration of CD4
+ and CD8
+ T-cells skewed toward an effector memory phenotype, with higher frequencies of NKT cells, neutrophils/gMDSCs and monocytes, especially the inflammatory subset, and higher CD4
+ T
EM/CD4
+ T
reg and CD8
+ T
EM/CD4
+ T
reg ratios. Conversely, M. brumae treatment triggered higher proportions of total activated immune cells and activated CD4
+ and CD8
+ T
EM cells and lower ratios of CD4
+ T
EM cells/CD4
+ T
regs, CD8
+ T
EM cells/CD4
+ T
regs and inflammatory/reparative monocytes. Notably, the mycobacterial cell envelope composition in M. brumae had a strong impact on the immune microenvironment, shaping the B and myeloid cell compartment and T-cell maturation profile and thus improving survival. Overall, we demonstrate that the bladder immune microenvironment induced by mycobacterial treatment is species specific and shaped by mycobacterial cell envelope composition. Therefore, the global bladder immune microenvironment can be remodelled, improving the quality of infiltrating immune cells, the balance between inflammatory and regulatory/suppressive responses and increasing survival.
KW - Mycobacterium brumae
KW - bcg
KW - immunotherapy
KW - intravesical mycobacterial treatment
KW - non-muscle invasive bladder cancer
KW - tumor immune microenvironment
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85140359290
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/385ffc9e-1710-33b3-b454-f28c6fd69872/
U2 - 10.3389/fimmu.2022.993401
DO - 10.3389/fimmu.2022.993401
M3 - Article
C2 - 36304456
SN - 1664-3224
VL - 13
JO - Frontiers in immunology
JF - Frontiers in immunology
M1 - 993401
ER -