1. Intratumoral presence of the genotoxic gut bacteria pks+ E. coli, Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis, and Fusobacterium nucleatum and their association with clinicopathological and molecular features of colorectal cancer
- Author
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Joo, JE, Chu, YL, Georgeson, P, Walker, R, Mahmood, K, Clendenning, M, Meyers, AL, Como, J, Joseland, S, Preston, SG, Diepenhorst, N, Toner, J, Ingle, DJ, Sherry, NL, Metz, A, Lynch, BM, Milne, RL, Southey, MC, Hopper, JL, Win, AK, Macrae, FA, Winship, IM, Rosty, C, Jenkins, MA, Buchanan, DD, Joo, JE, Chu, YL, Georgeson, P, Walker, R, Mahmood, K, Clendenning, M, Meyers, AL, Como, J, Joseland, S, Preston, SG, Diepenhorst, N, Toner, J, Ingle, DJ, Sherry, NL, Metz, A, Lynch, BM, Milne, RL, Southey, MC, Hopper, JL, Win, AK, Macrae, FA, Winship, IM, Rosty, C, Jenkins, MA, and Buchanan, DD
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to investigate clinicopathological and molecular tumour features associated with intratumoral pks+ Escherichia coli (pks+E.coli+), pks+E.coli- (non-E.coli bacteria harbouring the pks island), Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) and Fusobacterium nucleatum (F. nucleatum). Methods: We screened 1697 tumour-derived DNA samples from the Australasian Colorectal Cancer Family Registry, Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study and the ANGELS study using targeted PCR. Results: Pks+E.coli+ was associated with male sex (P < 0.01) and APC:c.835-8 A > G somatic mutation (P = 0.03). The association between pks+E.coli+ and APC:c.835-8 A > G was specific to early-onset CRCs (diagnosed<45years, P = 0.02). The APC:c.835-A > G was not associated with pks+E.coli- (P = 0.36). F. nucleatum was associated with DNA mismatch repair deficiency (MMRd), BRAF:c.1799T>A p.V600E mutation, CpG island methylator phenotype, proximal tumour location, and high levels of tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (Ps < 0.01). In the stratified analysis by MMRd subgroups, F. nucleatum was associated with Lynch syndrome, MLH1 methylated and double MMR somatic mutated MMRd subgroups (Ps < 0.01). Conclusion: Intratumoral pks+E.coli+ but not pks+E.coli- are associated with CRCs harbouring the APC:c.835-8 A > G somatic mutation, suggesting that this mutation is specifically related to DNA damage from colibactin-producing E.coli exposures. F. nucleatum was associated with both hereditary and sporadic MMRd subtypes, suggesting the MMRd tumour microenvironment is important for F. nucleatum colonisation irrespective of its cause.
- Published
- 2024