Authors
Caroline H Johnson, Christine Dejea, David Edler, Linh T Hoang, Antonio Santidrian, Brunhilde Felding, Julijana Ivanisevic, Kevin Cho, Elizabeth Wick, Elizabeth, Hechenbleikner, Winnie Uritboonthai, Laura Goetz, Robert Casero, Drew Pardoll, James White, Gary Patti, Cynthia Sears, Gary Siuzdak
Publication date
2015/6/2
Journal
Cell Metabolism
Volume
21
Issue
6
Pages
891-7
Publisher
Cell Press
Description
Bacterial biofilms in the colon alter the host tissue microenvironment. A role for biofilms in colon cancer metabolism has been suggested but to date has not been evaluated. Using metabolomics, we investigated the metabolic influence that microbial biofilms have on colon tissues and the related occurrence of cancer. Patient-matched colon cancers and histologically normal tissues, with or without biofilms, were examined. We show the upregulation of polyamine metabolites in tissues from cancer hosts with significant enhancement of N1, N12-diacetylspermine in both biofilm-positive cancer and normal tissues. Antibiotic treatment, which cleared biofilms, decreased N1, N12-diacetylspermine levels to those seen in biofilm-negative tissues, indicating that host cancer and bacterial biofilm structures contribute to the polyamine metabolite pool. These results show that colonic mucosal biofilms alter the cancer …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CH Johnson, CM Dejea, D Edler, LT Hoang… - Cell metabolism, 2015