饮食和肠道菌群在肥胖-结直肠癌中的作用。

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Audrey A Goldbaum, Laura W Bowers, Abigail D Cox, Molly Gillig, Anna Clapp Organski, Tzu-Wen L Cross
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肥胖与结直肠癌(CRC)风险呈正相关。饮食不仅会导致肥胖,还会强烈影响肠道微生物群,这一因素被认为是影响结直肠癌的独立因素。为了分离肥胖相关肠道微生物群在结直肠癌中的作用,并评估饮食组成对这种关系的影响,我们将肥胖或保持高脂肪饮食(HFD),西方饮食(WD)或低脂肪饮食(LFD)的供体小鼠的肠道微生物群移植到抗生素治疗的受体小鼠中,随后接受偶氮甲烷诱导结直肠癌。我们假设供体小鼠的致肥性饮食,而不是它们的肥胖状态,将是肠道微生物群介导的结直肠癌发展的更强驱动因素。有趣的是,虽然观察到支持我们假设的证据,但基于肥胖饮食类型对结直肠癌结局的不同影响被发现,例如,与hfd相关的肠道微生物群促进肿瘤发生,而与wd相关的肠道微生物群促进肿瘤生长。在肿瘤诱导前存在的显著富集的细菌类群可能通过肠道通透性或炎症介导了这些结果,例如在接受hfd相关肠道微生物群的小鼠中存在Sutterella和Dorea,在接受wd相关肠道微生物群的小鼠中存在Bacteroidetes。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,饮食驱动肠道微生物群对结直肠癌发展的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Role of Diet and the Gut Microbiota in the Obesity-Colorectal Cancer Link.

Obesity is positively associated with colorectal cancer (CRC) risk. Diet not only contributes to obesity, but also strongly influences the gut microbiota, a factor that is thought to independently affect CRC. To isolate the role of obesity-associated gut microbiota in CRC and to assess the impact of diet composition on this relationship, we transplanted the gut microbiota from donor mice that developed obesity or remained lean on a high-fat diet (HFD), Western diet (WD), or low-fat diet (LFD) into antibiotic-treated recipient mice that subsequently received azoxymethane to induce CRC. We hypothesized that the obesogenic diets of the donor mice, rather than their obesity status, would be a stronger driver of gut microbiota-mediated CRC development. Interestingly, while evidence supporting our hypothesis was observed, differential effects on CRC outcomes based on the type of obesogenic diets were found, such that HFD-associated gut microbiota promotes tumor incidence whereas WD-associated gut microbiota promotes tumor growth. Significantly enriched bacterial taxa present before tumor induction may be mediating these results through intestinal permeability or inflammation, such as Sutterella and Dorea in mice received HFD-associated gut microbiota, and Bacteroidetes in mice received WD-microbiota. Overall, our results demonstrated that diet drives the gut microbiota-derived impact on CRC development.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
172
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: This timely publication reports and reviews current findings on the effects of nutrition on the etiology, therapy, and prevention of cancer. Etiological issues include clinical and experimental research in nutrition, carcinogenesis, epidemiology, biochemistry, and molecular biology. Coverage of therapy focuses on research in clinical nutrition and oncology, dietetics, and bioengineering. Prevention approaches include public health recommendations, preventative medicine, behavior modification, education, functional foods, and agricultural and food production policies.
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