Toxoplasma gondii infection supports the infiltration of T cells into brain tumors

Nguyen, Yen, Microbiology - School of Medicine, University of Virginia
Zong, Hui, MD-MICR Microbiology, University of Virginia
Few T cells infiltrate into primary brain tumors, fundamentally hampering the effectiveness of immunotherapy. We hypothesized that Toxoplasma gondii, a microorganism that naturally elicits a Th1 response in the brain, can promote T cell infiltration into brain tumors despite their immune suppressive microenvironment. Using a mouse genetic model for medulloblastoma, we found that T. gondii infection induced the infiltration of activatable T cells into the tumor mass and led to myeloid cell reprogramming toward a T cell-supportive state, without causing severe health issues in mice. The study provides a concrete foundation for future studies to take advantage of the immune modulatory capacity of T. gondii to facilitate brain tumor immunotherapy.
PHD (Doctor of Philosophy)
Brain tumors, Toxoplasma gondii, Tumor-infiltrating T cells, IFN𝛾
English
2024/08/01