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Staphylococcus aureus induce drug resistance in cancer T cells in Sézary Syndrome.

Chella Krishna VadivelAndreas Willerslev-OlsenMartin Rich Javadi NaminiZiao ZengLang YanMaria DanielsenMaria GluudEmil Marek Heymans PallesenKarolina WojewodaAmra OsmancevicSigne HedeboYun-Tsan ChangLise M LindahlSergei B KoralovLarisa J GeskinSusan E BatesLars IversenThomas LitmanRikke BechMarion WobseEmmanuella GuenovaMaria R KamstrupNiels OdumTerkild Brink Buus
Published in: Blood (2024)
Patients with Sézary syndrome (SS), a leukemic variant of cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL), are prone to Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) infections and have a poor prognosis due to treatment-resistance. Here, we report that S. aureus and staphylococcal enterotoxins (SE) induce drug resistance in malignant T-cells against therapeutics commonly used in CTCL. Supernatant from patient-derived, SE-producing S. aureus and recombinant SE significantly inhibit cell death induced by HDAC inhibitor romidepsin in primary malignant T-cells from SS patients. Bacterial killing by engineered, bacteriophage-derived, S. aureus-specific endolysin (XZ.700) abrogates the effect of S. aureus supernatant. Likewise, mutations in MHC Class II binding sites of SE type-A (SEA) and anti-SEA antibody block induction of resistance. Importantly, SE also triggers resistance to other HDAC inhibitors (vorinostat and resminostat) and chemotherapeutic drugs (doxorubicin and etoposide). Multimodal single-cell sequencing indicates TCR, NFB, and JAK/STAT signaling pathways (previously associated with drug-resistance) as putative mediators of SE-induced drug resistance. In support, inhibition of TCR-signaling and Protein Kinase C (upstream of NFB) counteracts SE-induced rescue from drug-induced cell death. Inversely, SE cannot rescue from cell death induced by proteasome/NFB inhibitor bortezomib. Inhibition of JAK/STAT only blocks SE-induced rescue of malignant T-cells in some but not all patients, suggesting two distinct ways SE can induce drug resistance. In conclusion, we show that S. aureus enterotoxins induce drug-resistance in primary malignant T-cells. These findings suggest that S. aureus enterotoxins cause clinical treatment-resistance in SS patients and that anti-bacterial measures may improve the outcome of cancer-directed therapy in patients harboring S. aureus.
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