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The breast tissue microbiome, stroma, immune cells and breast cancer.

Authors :
Hieken, Tina J
Chen, Jun
Chen, Beiyun
Johnson, Stephen
Hoskin, Tanya L
Degnim, Amy C
Walther-Antonio, Marina R
Chia, Nicholas
Source :
Neoplasia. May2022, Vol. 27, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• Breast tissue composition differences were observed between benign and malignant disease states. • Immune cell infiltrates were more marked in the setting of breast cancer. • Microbial communities, by deep sequencing of breast tissue, varied with tissue composition. • Alpha and beta diversity of the tissue microbiome varied with percentage fat and fibrosis in tissue. • Observed effects were independent of patient BMI. Stromal and immune cell composition alterations in benign breast tissue associate with future cancer risk. Pilot data suggest the innate microbiome of normal breast tissue differs between women with and without breast cancer. Microbiome alterations might explain tissue microenvironment variations associated with disease status. Prospectively-collected sterile normal breast tissues from women with benign (n=16) or malignant (n=17) disease underwent 16SrRNA sequencing with Illumina MiSeq and Hybrid-denovo pipeline processing. Breast tissue was scored for fibrosis and fat percentages and immune cell infiltrates (lobulitis) classified as absent/mild/moderate/severe. Alpha and beta diversity were calculated on rarefied OTU data and associations analyzed with multiple linear regression and PERMANOVA. Breast tissue stromal fat% was lower and fibrosis% higher in benign disease versus cancer (median 30% versus 60%, p=0.01, 70% versus 30%, p=0.002, respectively). The microbiome varied with stromal composition. Alpha diversity (Chao1) correlated with fat% (r=0.38, p=0.02) and fibrosis% (r=-0.32, p=0.05) and associated with different microbial populations as indicated by beta diversity metrics (weighted UniFrac, p=0.08, fat%, p=0.07, fibrosis%). Permutation testing with FDR control revealed taxa differences for fat% in Firmicutes, Bacilli, Bacillales, Staphylococcaceae and genus Staphylococcus , and fibrosis% in Firmicutes, Spirochaetes, Bacilli, Bacillales, Spirochaetales, Proteobacteria RF32, Sphingomonadales, Staphylococcaceae, and genera Clostridium, Staphylococcus, Spirochaetes, Actinobacteria Adlercreutzia. Moderate/severe lobulitis was more common in cancer (73%) than benign disease (13%), p=0.003, but no significant microbial associations were seen. These data suggest a link between breast tissue stromal alterations and its microbiome, further supporting a connection between the breast tissue microenvironment and breast cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15228002
Volume :
27
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neoplasia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156226596
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2022.100786