肠道菌群及其代谢产物对结直肠癌免疫代谢的影响。

Immunometabolism (Cobham (Surrey, England)) Pub Date : 2024-11-28 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1097/IN9.0000000000000050
Madison Flory, Paloma Bravo, Ashfaqul Alam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

结直肠癌(CRC)非常普遍,约占全球癌症病例和死亡人数的十分之一。它是第二最致命和第三最常见的癌症类型。尽管在过去的几十年里,肠道微生物群与结直肠癌的癌变有关,但由于肠道微生物群高度多样化和可变,它仍然是结直肠癌发展的最不为人所知的危险因素之一。许多研究发现,与健康对照相比,结直肠癌患者具有独特的微生物特征,其变化取决于患者的年龄、疾病分期和位置。此外,机制研究表明,肿瘤相关细菌在结肠肿瘤发生和进展过程中产生多种代谢物、蛋白质和大分子,影响癌细胞和免疫细胞。在这里,我们总结了微生物群在肿瘤发生和进展中的作用,然后我们讨论了CRC肿瘤细胞、免疫细胞和肿瘤微环境的代谢改变如何导致肿瘤内免疫细胞的激活、分化、功能和表型的重编程。肿瘤相关微生物群也经历代谢适应以在肿瘤环境中生存,导致免疫逃避、突变积累和免疫细胞损伤。最后,我们讨论了肠道微生物群、免疫代谢和结直肠癌之间的相互作用,强调了影响癌症发生、进展和癌症治疗效果的复杂相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of gut microbiota and its metabolites on immunometabolism in colorectal cancer.

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is highly prevalent, accounting for approximately one-tenth of cancer cases and deaths globally. It stands as the second most deadly and third most common cancer type. Although the gut microbiota has been implicated in CRC carcinogenesis for the last several decades, it remains one of the least understood risk factors for CRC development, as the gut microbiota is highly diverse and variable. Many studies have uncovered unique microbial signatures in CRC patients compared with healthy matched controls, with variations dependent on patient age, disease stage, and location. In addition, mechanistic studies revealed that tumor-associated bacteria produce diverse metabolites, proteins, and macromolecules during tumor development and progression in the colon, which impact both cancer cells and immune cells. Here, we summarize microbiota's role in tumor development and progression, then we discuss how the metabolic alterations in CRC tumor cells, immune cells, and the tumor microenvironment result in the reprogramming of activation, differentiation, functions, and phenotypes of immune cells within the tumor. Tumor-associated microbiota also undergoes metabolic adaptation to survive within the tumor environment, leading to immune evasion, accumulation of mutations, and impairment of immune cells. Finally, we conclude with a discussion on the interplay between gut microbiota, immunometabolism, and CRC, highlighting a complex interaction that influences cancer development, progression, and cancer therapy efficacy.

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