Colorectal cancer-associated microbiota contributes to oncogenic epigenetic signatures

Archive ouverte

Sobhani, Iradj | Bergsten, Emma | Couffin, Séverine | Amiot, Aurelien | Nebbad, Biba | Barau, Caroline | De’angelis, Nicola | Rabot, Sylvie | Canouï-Poitrine, Florence | Mestivier, Denis | Pedron, Thierry | Khazaie, Khashayarsha | Sansonetti, Philippe

Edité par CCSD ; National Academy of Sciences -

International audience. Sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC) is a result of complex interactions between the host and its environment. Environmental stressors act by causing host cell DNA alterations implicated in the onset of cancer. Here we investigate the stressor ability of CRC-associated gut dysbiosis as causal agent of host DNA alterations. The epigenetic nature of these alterations was investigated in humans and in mice. Germ-free mice receiving fecal samples from subjects with normal colonoscopy or from CRC patients were monitored for 7 or 14 wk. Aberrant crypt foci, luminal microbiota, and DNA alterations (colonic exome sequencing and methylation patterns) were monitored following human feces transfer. CRC-associated microbiota induced higher numbers of hypermethylated genes in murine colonic mucosa (vs. healthy controls' microbiota recipients). Several gene promoters including SFRP1,2,3, PENK, NPY, ALX4, SEPT9, and WIF1 promoters were found hypermethylated in CRC but not in normal tissues or effluents from fecal donors. In a pilot study (n = 266), the blood methylation levels of 3 genes (Wif1, PENK, and NPY) were shown closely associated with CRC dysbiosis. In a validation study (n = 1,000), the cumulative methylation index (CMI) of these genes was significantly higher in CRCs than in controls. Further, CMI appeared as an independent risk factor for CRC diagnosis as shown by multivariate analysis that included fecal immunochemical blood test. Consequently, fecal bacterial species in individuals with higher CMI in blood were identified by whole metagenomic analysis. Thus, CRC-related dysbiosis induces methylation of host genes, and corresponding CMIs together with associated bacteria are potential biomarkers for CRC.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Parvimonas micra, an oral pathobiont associated with colorectal cancer, epigenetically reprograms human colonocytes

Archive ouverte | Bergsten, Emma | CCSD

International audience. Recently, an intestinal dysbiotic microbiota with enrichment in oral cavity bacteria has been described in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. Here, we characterize and investigate one of these...

Parvimonas micra , an oral pathobiont associated with colorectal cancer, epigenetically reprograms human primary intestinal epithelial cells

Archive ouverte | Bergsten, Emma | CCSD

Posté le 14 mars 2022 sur BioRxiv. Recently, an intestinal dysbiotic microbiota in the feces of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients with an enrichment of bacteria belonging to the oral microbiota has been described. He...

The colibactin-producing Escherichia coli alters the tumor microenvironment to immunosuppressive lipid overload facilitating colorectal cancer progression and chemoresistance

Archive ouverte | de Oliveira Alves, Nilmara | CCSD

International audience. Intratumoral bacteria flexibly contribute to cellular and molecular tumor heterogeneity for supporting cancer recurrence through poorly understood mechanisms. Using spatial metabolomic profil...

Chargement des enrichissements...