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Fecal expression of Escherichia coli lysine decarboxylase (LdcC) is downregulated in E-cadherin negative lobular breast carcinoma

Authors :
Gábor Méhes
Péter Árkosy
Péter Bai
Dezső Tóth
Borbála Kiss
Judit Tóth
Éva Sebő
Zsanett Sári
Zsolt Karányi
Miklós Török
Karen Uray
Tünde Kovács
Ilona Kovács
Dóra Szeőcs
Tamás Csonka
Edit Mikó
Source :
Physiology International. 107:349-358
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Akademiai Kiado Zrt., 2020.

Abstract

Breast cancer is characterized by oncobiosis, the abnormal composition of the microbiome in neoplastic diseases. The biosynthetic capacity of the oncobiotic flora in breast cancer is suppressed, as suggested by metagenomic studies. The microbiome synthesizes a set of cytostatic and antimetastatic metabolites that are downregulated in breast cancer, including cadaverine, a microbiome metabolite with cytostatic properties. We set out to assess how the protein expression of constitutive lysine decarboxylase (LdcC), a key enzyme for cadaverine production, changes in the feces of human breast cancer patients (n = 35). We found that the fecal expression of Escherichia coli LdcC is downregulated in lobular cases as compared to invasive carcinoma of no special type (NST) cases. Lobular breast carcinoma is characterized by low or absent expression of E-cadherin. Fecal E. coli LdcC protein expression is downregulated in E-cadherin negative breast cancer cases as compared to positive ones. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis of LdcC expression in lobular and NST cases revealed that fecal E. coli LdcC protein expression might have predictive values. These data suggest that the oncobiotic transformation of the microbiome indeed leads to the downregulation of the production of cytostatic and antimetastatic metabolites. In E-cadherin negative lobular carcinoma that has a higher potential for metastasis formation, the protein levels of enzymes producing antimetastatic metabolites are downregulated. This finding represents a new route that renders lobular cases permissive for metastasis formation. Furthermore, our findings underline the role of oncobiosis in regulating metastasis formation in breast cancer.

Details

ISSN :
2498602X
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physiology International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c3bb2c0ccc23e26042b89305af29381
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1556/2060.2020.00016