4.7 Article

Oral microbiota transplantation fights against head and neck radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in mice

期刊

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2021.10.028

关键词

Nasal; Oral and laryngeal cancer; Radiotherapy; Radiation-induced oral mucositis; Oral and gut microbiota; Lactobacillaceae; S100a9

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32100087, 81872555, 82003399, 82173467]
  2. Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars of Tianjin [20JCJQJC00100]

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Oral mucositis is a common complication in NOALC patients undergoing radiotherapy, and oral microbiota transplantation can alleviate the symptoms. The gut microbiota also plays a role in oral mucositis progression. Additionally, specific oral microorganisms like Lactobacillaceae could potentially serve as biomarkers for predicting NOALC prognosis after radiotherapy.
Oral mucositis is a common radiotherapy-induced complication among nasal, oral and laryngeal cancer (NOALC) patients. This complication leads to decreased quality of life and has few treatments. Here, fractionated radiation was performed to mimic radiotherapy for NOALCs in mouse models. Oral microbiota transplantation (OMT) mitigated oral mucositis, as judged by reconstructed epithelium and tongue papillae, fewer infiltrated leukocytes and more proliferative cells in the oral epithelium. The gut microbiota impacted oral mucositis progression, and OMT restructured oral and gut bacteria configurations and reprogrammed the gene expression profile of tongue tissues. In vivo silencing of glossal S100 calcium binding protein A9 debilitated the radioprotection of OMT. In light of clinical samples, we identified that patients with different alteration trends of Lactobacillaceae frequency presented different primary lesions and prognoses of NOALC following radiotherapy. Together, our findings provide new insights into the oral-gut microbiota axis and underpin the suggestion that OMT might be harnessed as a novel remedy to fight against oral mucositis in NOALC patients following radiotherapy in preclinical settings. Of note, oral microorganisms, such as Lactobacillaceae, might be employed as biomarkers to predict the prognosis of NOALC with radiotherapy. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology.

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