Remodelling of colorectal cancer cell signaling by microbiota and immunity in diabetes

Author:

Gutiérrez-Salmerón María1,Lucena Silvia Rocío Rocío2,Chocarro-Calvo Ana3,Garcia-Martinez Jose Manuel4,Martín Orozco Rosa M5,García-Jiménez Custodia6

Affiliation:

1. M Gutiérrez-Salmerón, Area Physiology. Dpt. Basic Health Sciences., Rey Juan Carlos University, ALCORCÓN, Spain

2. S Lucena, Area Physiology. Dpt. Basic Health Sciences, Rey Juan Carlos University, ALCORCÓN, Spain

3. A Chocarro-Calvo, Area Physiology. Dpt. Basic Health Sciences, Rey Juan Carlos University, ALCORCON, Spain

4. J Garcia-Martinez, Area Physiology. Dpt Basic Health Sciences, Rey Juan Carlos University, ALCORCON, Spain

5. R Martín Orozco, Area Physiology. Dpt Basic Health Scieneces, Rey Juan Carlos University, Alcorcón, Spain

6. C García-Jiménez, Area Physiology. Dpt Basic Health Sciences., Rey Juan Carlos University, ALCORCÓN, Spain

Abstract

Obesity is the strongest known risk factor to develop Type 2 diabetes (T2D) and both share a state of chronic, diffuse and low-grade inflammation, impaired immune responses and alterations in the composition and function of the microbiome. Notably, these hallmarks are shared with colorectal cancer (CRC), which is epidemiologically associated to obesity and T2D. Gut barrier damages in T2D, destabilize the microbiome that metabolizes the diet and modulates the host immune response triggering inflammatory and proliferative pathways. In this review, we discuss the pathways altered by defects in the immune response and microbiota that may link T2D to CRC development. Stressed adipocytes, metabolic incongruity in blood and gut barrier failure with dysbiosis cooperate to establish imbalances between immune innate and adaptive cells and cytokines such as interleukin 6 (IL-6) or tumour necrosis factor α (TNF-α) that define low-grade diffuse inflammation in T2D. Inflammation drives tissue repair through proliferation and migration (critical mechanisms for tumourigenesis) and under physiological conditions feeds anti-inflammatory cytokine production to resolve the process. The disproportion in pro- versus anti-inflammatory cells and cytokines imposed by T2D will impact the tumour micro- and macro-environment, favouring tumour proliferation, angiogenesis and decreased immune responses. Complex bidirectional relationships between the metabolic environment of T2D, gut microbiota, and immune dysfunctions may favour tumour cell demands and will define the outcome. Animal models developed to study the relationships between T2D and CRC in the context of microbiota and immune system are discussed.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Cancer Research,Endocrinology,Oncology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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