| Literature DB >> 29383197 |
John P Phelan1, F Jerry Reen1, Jose A Caparros-Martin2, Rosemary O'Connor3, Fergal O'Gara1,2.
Abstract
Dietary factors, probiotic agents, aging and antibiotics/medicines impact on gut microbiome composition leading to disturbances in localised microbial populations. The impact can be profound and underlies a plethora of human disorders, including the focus of this review; cancer. Compromised microbiome populations can alter bile acid signalling and produce distinct pathophysiological bile acid profiles. These in turn have been associated with cancer development and progression. Exposure to high levels of bile acids, combined with localised molecular/genome instability leads to the acquisition of bile mediated neoplastic alterations, generating apoptotic resistant proliferation phenotypes. However, in recent years, several studies have emerged advocating the therapeutic benefits of bile acid signalling in suppressing molecular and phenotypic hallmarks of cancer progression. These studies suggest that in some instances, bile acids may reduce cancer phenotypic effects, thereby limiting metastatic potential. In this review, we contextualise the current state of the art to propose that the bile acid/gut microbiome axis can influence cancer progression to the extent that classical in vitro cancer hallmarks of malignancy (cell invasion, cell migration, clonogenicity, and cell adhesion) are significantly reduced. We readily acknowledge the existence of a bile acid/gut microbiome axis in cancer initiation, however, in light of recent advances, we focus exclusively on the role of bile acids as potentially beneficial molecules in suppressing cancer progression. Finally, we theorise that suppressing aggressive malignant phenotypes through bile acid/gut microbiome axis modulation could uncover new and innovative disease management strategies for managing cancers in vulnerable cohorts.Entities:
Keywords: bile acids; cancer; dysbiosis; gut-axis; microbiome
Year: 2017 PMID: 29383197 PMCID: PMC5777809 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.22803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
The impact of bile acids on signalling pathways involved in cancer aetiology
| Bile Acid | Signal Pathway/Molecular basis | Bile acids mediated cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| ROS mediated NF-κB activation | Oesophageal Cancer | Jenkins | |
| NF-κB activation | Gastric apoptosis (limited by aspirin) | Redlak MJ | |
| ROS, DNA damage, inflammation, NF-κB activation, enhanced cell proliferation | Colon cancer | Payne CM | |
| Activates Cdx2 promoter via NF-κB | Metaplasia leading to Barrets' oesophagus | Kazumori | |
| Targets COX2 (stress responder) and p63 (transcriptional regulator) | Squamous to metaplasia cell transition in Oesophageal Cancer | Roman S | |
| Deregulation of TSC1/mTOR by bile acids | Oesophageal adenocarcinoma | Yen | |
| ROS induction, DNA damage (dose dependent) MUC2 induction | Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma and DCA | Jenkins GJ | |
| DCA combined with methylselenol inhibits colon cancer cell proliferation. Induces SAPK/JNK1/2, p38 MAPK, ERK1/2 activation | Colon Cancer | Zeng | |
| DCA targets cell proliferation and decreases suppressor activation in cell cycle and apoptosis. Activates ERK1/2, caspase-3 and PARP | Colon Cancer | Zeng | |
| ROS induced genotoxicity in OE33 cells | Oesophageal Cancer | Jenkins |
The major target of bile signalling appears to be NF-κB which is activated in several cancers including colon and oesophageal cancer.
The potentially therapeutic impact of bile acids on cancer development
| Bile Acid | Signal Pathway/Molecular basis | Bile acid modulated cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotes cleavage of Bid and Bax and down-regulation of Bcl-2. No effect on prostate cell proliferation | Prostate Cancer | Goldberg | |
| HIF-1α destabilisation and significant reduction in cancer invasion phenotypes | Prostate and Breast Cancer | Phelan | |
| HIF-1α destabilisation | Metastatic Cancer | Legendre | |
| DCA induction of MUC2 and inhibition of cell invasion and migration, reduction in Snail and MMP9 expression | Gastric Carcinoma | Pyo | |
| Inhibition of HL60 and THP-1 proliferation, retinoic acid and vitamin D in differentiation, and down-regulating the serine protease myeloblastin | Leukaemia | Zimber | |
| Derivatives arrested cell cycle at G1, suppressed cdk2 and E-dependent kinase activities, | Prostate Carcinoma | Xu et al (2017) Choi et al (2003) |
For some cancers, bile acids appear to suppress cancer invasion phenotypes and may destabilise HIF-1α, a key regulator of hypoxia in metastatic disease.
Figure 1Events initiating bile acid mediated cancer
Supra-physiological levels of bile acids exacerbate key cellular physiological events in cancer development.
Figure 2Molecular events arising in response to (A) bile acid homeostasis and (B) bile acid dysregulation. (A) Unaltered gut microbiota enzymatically modify primary bile acid pools (conjugated and unconjugated bile acids) to unconjugated secondary bile acids DCA and LCA. Secondary bile acids activate the nuclear receptors FXR, PXR and the G protein-coupled receptor TGR5 preventing NF-kB-mediated production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. FXR activation also inhibits bile acid synthesis in the liver and maintenance of bile acid homeostasis. LCA can also induce the (Vitamin D-Receptor) VDR and PXR-mediated transcription of genes involved in the detoxification and clearance of toxic metabolites such as LCA. (B) Factors affecting gut microbiota can alter the bile acid/gut microbiome axis, generating pathophysiological levels of bile acids and bile profiles that no longer activate FXR, PXR, VDR and TGR5, facilitating NF-KB-mediated expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Production of toxins or harmful metabolic by-products by dysbiotic gut microbiota also stimulate production of inflammatory markers by immune cells, which in turn contributes to disruption of the epithelial barrier. Downregulation of genes involved in the clearance of harmful metabolites, contributes to the accumulation of hydrophobic secondary bile acids in the intestinal lumen, which can induce damage in the cell membrane. The absence of FXR-mediated signalling results in the loss of inhibition of bile acid synthesis in the liver, contributing to a vicious cycle that increases levels of bile acids in the intestinal lumen. This exacerbates a pro-inflammatory phenotype. Together with excessive ROS production and localised genomic instability, preliminary neoplasms develop in vulnerable tissues and organs e.g. oesophagus, intestine and colon.
Figure 3How bile acids may influence cancer progression
Factors incorporating an unbalanced approach to diet (red line), junk food, excessive medicine/probiotic intake and age affect bile acid production. This alters the bile acid/gut microbiome axis, generating pathophysiological levels of bile acids. Together with excessive ROS and localised genomic instability, preliminary neoplasms can develop in vulnerable tissues and organs e.g. oesophagus, intestine and colon. Conversely, a healthy approach to diet (black line), appropriate medicine intake and other factors may help reduce pathophysiological bile levels, thereby maintaining a healthy bile acid/ gut microbiome axis. If potentially metastatic lesions are present in susceptible organs, physiological bile acid levels could limit cell invasion, cell migration and cell adhesion phenotypes.