| Literature DB >> 30855275 |
Sarah Tomkovich1, Christine M Dejea2, Kathryn Winglee3, Julia L Drewes2, Liam Chung2, Franck Housseau2, Jillian L Pope1, Josee Gauthier1, Xiaolun Sun1, Marcus Mühlbauer1, Xiuli Liu4, Payam Fathi2, Robert A Anders5, Sepideh Besharati5, Ernesto Perez-Chanona1, Ye Yang1, Hua Ding2, Xinqun Wu2, Shaoguang Wu2, James R White6, Raad Z Gharaibeh1, Anthony A Fodor3, Hao Wang2, Drew M Pardoll2, Christian Jobin1,7, Cynthia L Sears2.
Abstract
Mucus-invasive bacterial biofilms are identified on the colon mucosa of approximately 50% of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and approximately 13% of healthy subjects. Here, we test the hypothesis that human colon biofilms comprise microbial communities that are carcinogenic in CRC mouse models. Homogenates of human biofilm-positive colon mucosa were prepared from tumor patients (tumor and paired normal tissues from surgical resections) or biofilm-positive biopsies from healthy individuals undergoing screening colonoscopy; homogenates of biofilm-negative colon biopsies from healthy individuals undergoing screening colonoscopy served as controls. After 12 weeks, biofilm-positive, but not biofilm-negative, human colon mucosal homogenates induced colon tumor formation in 3 mouse colon tumor models (germ-free ApcMinΔ850/+;Il10-/- or ApcMinΔ850/+ and specific pathogen-free ApcMinΔ716/+ mice). Remarkably, biofilm-positive communities from healthy colonoscopy biopsies induced colon inflammation and tumors similarly to biofilm-positive tumor tissues. By 1 week, biofilm-positive human tumor homogenates, but not healthy biopsies, displayed consistent bacterial mucus invasion and biofilm formation in mouse colons. 16S rRNA gene sequencing and RNA-Seq analyses identified compositional and functional microbiota differences between mice colonized with biofilm-positive and biofilm-negative communities. These results suggest human colon mucosal biofilms, whether from tumor hosts or healthy individuals undergoing screening colonoscopy, are carcinogenic in murine models of CRC.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial infections; Colorectal cancer; Microbiology; Mouse models; Oncology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30855275 PMCID: PMC6436866 DOI: 10.1172/JCI124196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808