Alterations in mucosa-associated microbiota in the stomach of patients with gastric cancer
-
Published:2021-03-26
Issue:3
Volume:44
Page:701-714
-
ISSN:2211-3428
-
Container-title:Cellular Oncology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Cell Oncol.
Author:
Deng Yilin,Ding Xuewei,Song Qingyuan,Zhao Gang,Han Lei,Ding Bowen,Wang Xianhao,Hao Xishan,Li Hui
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study was to characterize alterations in mucosa-associated microbiota in different anatomical locations of the stomach during gastric cancer progression and to identify associations between Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric microbial changes in patients with gastric cancer.
Methods
Twenty-five H. pylori negative subjects with chronic gastritis and thirty-four subjects with gastric cancer were recruited, including H. pylori negative and positive patients with tumors in the antrum and the corpus. Gastric mucosa-associated microbiota were determined by 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing using a 454 sequencing platform.
Results
We found that individuals with chronic gastritis from three different anatomical sites exhibited different microbiota compositions, although the microbial alpha diversity, richness and beta diversity were similar. Compared to patients with chronic gastritis, the gastric microbiota compositions were significantly different at the order level in the antrum and the corpus of patients with gastric cancer, which was dependent on the H. pylori infection status. Microbial alpha diversity and species richness, however, were similar between chronic gastritis and gastric cancer cases and independent of H. pylori status. The microbial community structure in patients with gastric cancer was distinct from that in patients with chronic gastritis. In addition, we found that the presence of H. pylori markedly altered the structure in gastric corpus cancer, but only mildly affected the antrum.
Conclusion
Our data revealed distinct niche-specific microbiota alterations during the progression from gastritis to gastric cancer. These alterations may reflect adaptions of the microbiota to the diverse specific environmental habitats in the stomach, and may play an important, as yet undetermined, role in gastric carcinogenesis.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China Tianjin Science and Technology Major Project of Chronic Diseases Prevention and Control
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology,Molecular Medicine,General Medicine
Reference42 articles.
1. J. Lloyd-Price, G. Abu-Ali, C. Huttenhower, The healthy human microbiome. Genome Med. 8, 51 (2016) 2. N.H.W. Group, J. Peterson, S. Garges, M. Giovanni, P. McInnes, L. Wang, J.A. Schloss, V. Bonazzi, J.E. McEwen, K.A. Wetterstrand, C. Deal, C.C. Baker, V. Di Francesco, T.K. Howcroft, R.W. Karp, R.D. Lunsford, C.R. Wellington, T. Belachew, M. Wright, C. Giblin, H. David, M. Mills, R. Salomon, C. Mullins, B. Akolkar, L. Begg, C. Davis, L. Grandison, M. Humble, J. Khalsa, A.R. Little, H. Peavy, C. Pontzer, M. Portnoy, M.H. Sayre, P. Starke-Reed, S. Zakhari, J. Read, B. Watson, M. Guyer, The NIH Human Microbiome Project. Genome Res. 19, 2317–2323 (2009) 3. Fredrik Ba¨ckhed, Ruth E. Ley, Justin L. Sonnenburg, Daniel A. Peterson, J.I. Gordon. Host-bacterial mutualism in the human intestine. Science 307, 1915–1920 (2005) 4. I. Cho, M.J. Blaser, The human microbiome: At the interface of health and disease. Nat. Rev. Genet. 13, 260–270 (2012) 5. J.Robin Warren, Barry Marshall, B.A.Scoggins, J.A.Whitworth, J.P.Coghlan, D.A.Denton, R.T.Mason. Unidentified curved bacilli on gastirc epithelium in active chronic gastritis. The Lancet 1, 1273–1275 (1983)
Cited by
20 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|