Publication Details

Colorectal tumour mucosa microbiome is enriched in oral pathogens and defines three subtypes that correlate with markers of tumour progression

ZWINSOVÁ, B.; PETROV, V.; HRIVŇÁKOVÁ, M.; SMATANA, S.; MICENKOVÁ, L.; KAZDOVÁ, N.; POPOVICI, V.; HRSTKA, R.; ŠEFR, R.; BENCSIKOVÁ, B.; ZDRAŽILOVÁ-DUBSKÁ, L.; BRYCHTOVÁ, V.; NENUTIL, R.; VÍDEŇSKÁ, P.; BUDINSKÁ, E. Colorectal tumour mucosa microbiome is enriched in oral pathogens and defines three subtypes that correlate with markers of tumour progression. Cancers, 2021, vol. 13, no. 19, p. 1-25. ISSN: 2072-6694.
Czech title
Mikrobiom sliznice kolorektálního nádoru je obohacen o orální patogeny a definuje tři podtypy, které korelují s markery progrese nádoru
Type
journal article
Language
English
Authors
ZWINSOVÁ, B.
PETROV, V.
HRIVŇÁKOVÁ, M.
Smatana Stanislav, Ing.
MICENKOVÁ, L.
KAZDOVÁ, N.
POPOVICI, V.
HRSTKA, R.
ŠEFR, R.
BENCSIKOVÁ, B.
ZDRAŽILOVÁ-DUBSKÁ, L.
BRYCHTOVÁ, V.
NENUTIL, R.
VÍDEŇSKÁ, P.
BUDINSKÁ, E.
URL
Keywords

16S rRNA gene, Colorectal cancer, Microbial subtypes, Tumour microbiome

Abstract

Long-term dysbiosis of the gut microbiome has a significant impact on colorectal cancer (CRC) progression and explains part of the observed heterogeneity of the disease. Even though the shifts in gut microbiome in the normal-adenoma-carcinoma sequence were described, the landscape of the microbiome within CRC and its associations with clinical variables remain under-explored. We performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing of paired tumour tissue, adjacent visually normal mucosa and stool swabs of 178 patients with stage 0IV CRC to describe the tumour microbiome and its association with clinical variables. We identified new genera associated either with CRC tumour mucosa or CRC in general. The tumour mucosa was dominated by genera belonging to oral patho-gens. Based on the tumour microbiome, we stratified CRC patients into three subtypes, significantly associated with prognostic factors such as tumour grade, sidedness and TNM staging, BRAF mutation and MSI status. We found that the CRC microbiome is strongly correlated with the grade, location and stage, but these associations are dependent on the microbial environment. Our study opens new research avenues in the microbiome CRC biomarker detection of disease progression while identifying its limitations, suggesting the need for combining several sampling sites (e.g., stool and tumour swabs).

Published
2021
Pages
1–25
Journal
Cancers, vol. 13, no. 19, ISSN 2072-6694
DOI
UT WoS
000773923000016
EID Scopus
BibTeX
@article{BUT182946,
  author="ZWINSOVÁ, B. and PETROV, V. and HRIVŇÁKOVÁ, M. and SMATANA, S. and MICENKOVÁ, L. and KAZDOVÁ, N. and POPOVICI, V. and HRSTKA, R. and ŠEFR, R. and BENCSIKOVÁ, B. and ZDRAŽILOVÁ-DUBSKÁ, L. and BRYCHTOVÁ, V. and NENUTIL, R. and VÍDEŇSKÁ, P. and BUDINSKÁ, E.",
  title="Colorectal tumour mucosa microbiome is enriched in oral pathogens and defines three subtypes that correlate with markers of tumour progression",
  journal="Cancers",
  year="2021",
  volume="13",
  number="19",
  pages="1--25",
  doi="10.3390/cancers13194799",
  issn="2072-6694",
  url="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8507728/"
}
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