4.7 Article

Increase in Akkermansiaceae in Gut Microbiota of Prostate Cancer-Bearing Mice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22179626

Keywords

gut-cancer axes; 16S rRNA; time-series; amplicon sequencing; microbiota comparison; hormone

Funding

  1. Innovative Translational Agricultural Research Program of the Center For Intelligent Drug Systems and Smart Bio-devices (IDS2B) from The Featured Areas Research Center Program within the framework of the Higher Education Sprout Project by the Ministry of E [2018PRE092]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST-109-2311-B-009-002, 110-2311-B-A49-001]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study profiled gut microbiota composition in prostate cancer-bearing mice and control mice, revealing significant differences in microbial taxa and identifying bacteria families associated with responses to immunotherapy. The findings provide valuable insights into longitudinal microbiota alterations during cancer development, highlighting potential links between certain bacteria families and cancer progression.
Gut microbiota are reported to be associated with many diseases, including cancers. Several bacterial taxa have been shown to be associated with cancer development or response to treatment. However, longitudinal microbiota alterations during the development of cancers are relatively unexplored. To better understand how microbiota changes, we profiled the gut microbiota composition from prostate cancer-bearing mice and control mice at five different time points. Distinct gut microbiota differences were found between cancer-bearing mice and control mice. Akkermansiaceae was found to be significantly higher in the first three weeks in cancer-bearing mice, which implies its role in the early stage of cancer colonization. We also found that Bifidobacteriaceae and Enterococcaceae were more abundant in the second and last sampling week, respectively. The increments of Akkermansiaceae, Bifidobacteriaceae and Enterococcaceae were previously found to be associated with responses to immunotherapy, which suggests links between these bacteria families and cancers. Additionally, our function analysis showed that the bacterial taxa carrying steroid biosynthesis and butirosin and neomycin biosynthesis were increased, whereas those carrying naphthalene degradation decreased in cancer-bearing mice. Our work identified the bacteria taxa altered during prostate cancer progression and provided a resource of longitudinal microbiota profiles during cancer development in a mouse model.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available