4.3 Article

Could gut microbiota serve as prognostic biomarker associated with colorectal cancer patients' survival? A pilot study on relevant mechanism

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 29, Pages 46158-46172

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.10064

Keywords

colorectal cancer; inflammation; intestinal microbiology; prognostic biomarker; prognosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81270449, 81572314]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Provincial, China [ZR2012HM046]
  3. Qingdao Minsheng Science and Technology Foundation, Shandong, China [14-2-3-5-nsh]
  4. Qingdao Science and Technology Plan Project [13-1-4-220-jch]

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Evidences have shown that dysbiosis could promote the progression of colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the association of dysbiosis and prognosis of CRC is barely investigated. Therefore, we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach to determine differences in microbiota among tumor tissues of different prognosis and found that Fusobacterium nucleatum and Bacteroides fragilis were more abundant in worse prognosis groups, while Faecalibacterium prausnitzii displayed higher abundance in survival group. To further explore the prognostic value of the found bacteria, Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional regression analyses were used and the results exhibited that high abundance of F. nucleatum and B. fragilis were independent indicators of poor patient's survival. Besides, the expression of major inflammatory mediator were analyzed using PCR and western blot methods, and it turned out that high abundance of F. nucleatum was associated with increased expression of TNF-beta, beta-catenin and NF-lambda B, while COX-2, MMP-9 and NF-lambda B were positively related with high B. fragilis level, and high level of F. prausnitzii showed lower expression of beta-catenin, MMP-9 and NF-lambda B. Moreover, immunohistochemical analysis indicated that KRAS and BRAF expression were prominent in F. nucleatum and B. fragilis high abundance group, while MLH1 showed lower expression. In conclusion, F. nucleatum, B. fragilis and F. prausnitzii can be identified as useful prognostic biomarkers for CRC, and dysbiosis might worsen the patients' prognosis by up-regulating gut inflammation level.

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