4.7 Article

Chronic intestinal inflammation drives colorectal tumor formation triggered by dietary heme iron in vivo

期刊

ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY
卷 95, 期 7, 页码 2507-2522

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-021-03064-6

关键词

Dietary heme; Intestinal inflammation; Colorectal tumorigenesis; DNA damage; Mouse models

资金

  1. University Medical Center Mainz (MAIFOR)
  2. German Research Foundation [DFG] [FA1034/3-3]
  3. DFG [STE 493/21-1, FOR 2558, TRR241, FOR2438]
  4. Projekt DEAL

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Intake of heme iron leads to persistent dysbiosis of intestinal microbiota, chronic gut inflammation, and increased colorectal tumorigenesis. Intestinal inflammation plays a crucial role in heme iron-associated colorectal carcinogenesis.
The consumption of red meat is associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer (CRC). Multiple lines of evidence suggest that heme iron as abundant constituent of red meat is responsible for its carcinogenic potential. However, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood and particularly the role of intestinal inflammation has not been investigated. To address this important issue, we analyzed the impact of heme iron (0.25 mu mol/g diet) on the intestinal microbiota, gut inflammation and colorectal tumor formation in mice. An iron-balanced diet with ferric citrate (0.25 mu mol/g diet) was used as reference. 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that dietary heme reduced alpha-diversity and caused a persistent intestinal dysbiosis, with a continuous increase in gram-negative Proteobacteria. This was linked to chronic gut inflammation and hyperproliferation of the intestinal epithelium as attested by mini-endoscopy, histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Dietary heme triggered the infiltration of myeloid cells into colorectal mucosa with an increased level of COX-2 positive cells. Furthermore, flow cytometry-based phenotyping demonstrated an increased number of T cells and B cells in the lamina propria following heme intake, while gamma delta-T cells were reduced in the intraepithelial compartment. Dietary heme iron catalyzed formation of fecal N-nitroso compounds and was genotoxic in intestinal epithelial cells, yet suppressed intestinal apoptosis as evidenced by confocal microscopy and western blot analysis. Finally, a chemically induced CRC mouse model showed persistent intestinal dysbiosis, chronic gut inflammation and increased colorectal tumorigenesis following heme iron intake. Altogether, this study unveiled intestinal inflammation as important driver in heme iron-associated colorectal carcinogenesis.

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