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Increased Fusobacterium tumoural abundance affects immunogenicity in mucinous colorectal cancer and may be associated with improved clinical outcome

Authors :
William P. Duggan
Manuela Salvucci
Batuhan Kisakol
Andreas U. Lindner
Ian S. Reynolds
Heiko Dussmann
Joanna Fay
Tony O’Grady
Daniel B. Longley
Fiona Ginty
Elizabeth Mc Donough
Daniel J. Slade
John P. Burke
Jochen H. M. Prehn
Source :
Duggan, W P, Salvucci, M, Kisakol, B, Lindner, A U, Reynolds, I S, Dussmann, H, Fay, J, O'Grady, T, Longley, D B, Ginty, F, Mc Donough, E, Slade, D J, Burke, J P & Prehn, J H M 2023, ' Increased Fusobacterium tumoural abundance affects immunogenicity in mucinous colorectal cancer and may be associated with improved clinical outcome ', Journal of Molecular Medicine . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00109-023-02324-5
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract There is currently an urgent need to identify factors predictive of immunogenicity in colorectal cancer (CRC). Mucinous CRC is a distinct histological subtype of CRC, associated with a poor response to chemotherapy. Recent evidence suggests the commensal facultative anaerobe Fusobacterium may be especially prevalent in mucinous CRC. The objectives of this study were to assess the association of Fusobacterium abundance with immune cell composition and prognosis in mucinous CRC. Our study included two independent colorectal cancer patient cohorts, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort, and a cohort of rectal cancers from the Beaumont RCSI Cancer Centre (BRCC). Multiplexed immunofluorescence staining of a tumour microarray (TMA) from the BRCC cohort was undertaken using Cell DIVE technology. Our cohorts included 87 cases (13.3%) of mucinous and 565 cases (86.7%) of non-mucinous CRC. Mucinous CRC in the TCGA dataset was associated with an increased proportion of CD8 + lymphocytes (p = 0.018), regulatory T-cells (p = 0.001) and M2 macrophages (p = 0.001). In the BRCC cohort, mucinous RC was associated with enhanced CD8 + lymphocyte (p = 0.022), regulatory T-cell (p = 0.047), and B-cell (p = 0.025) counts. High Fusobacterium abundance was associated with an increased proportion of CD4 + lymphocytes (p = 0.031) and M1 macrophages (p = 0.006), whilst M2 macrophages (p = 0.043) were under-represented in this cohort. Patients with increased Fusobacterium relative abundance in our mucinous CRC TCGA cohort tended to have better clinical outcomes (DSS: likelihood ratio p = 0.04, logrank p = 0.052). Fusobacterium abundance may be associated with improved outcomes in mucinous CRC, possibly due to a modulatory effect on the host immune response. Key messages • Increased Fusobacterium relative abundance was not found to be associated with microsatellite instability in mucinous CRC. • Increased Fusobacterium relative abundance was associated with an M2/M1 macrophage switch, which is especially significant in mucinous CRC, where M2 macrophages are overexpressed. • Increased Fusobacterium relative abundance was associated with a significant improvement in disease specific survival in mucinous CRC. • Our findings were validated at a protein level within our own in house mucinous and non-mucinous rectal cancer cohorts.

Details

ISSN :
14321440 and 09462716
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b381d73c33c46ad0beb774487fa985d