Abstract
SUMMARYThis study identifies a novel pathotype of cervical cancer-associated Lactobacillus iners (L. iners) that results in chemoradiation resistance in vitro and is associated with poor patient survival. Cervical cancer affects over half a million women a year around the world. Treatment for women with locally advanced cancer is delivered with definitive chemoradiation (CRT) but is curative for only 60% of patients. There are few validated molecular markers to identify patients who will respond poorly to treatment. Tumor microbiome features are associated with treatment resistance in patients with colon and pancreatic cancers, and thus we investigated their role in the response of cervical cancer to therapy. We identified a strong association between poor clinical response to CRT and tumors dominated by L. iners. Cancer-associated L. iners promoted in vitro resistance of cervical cancer cells and modified the local tumor immunologic microenvironment, while non-cancer-associated L. iners did not. Assembly of genomes from cancer-derived L. iners also demonstrated pathogenic, metabolic, and immune functions not found in healthy patients.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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