Peri-weaning cholera toxin consumption suppresses chemically-induced carcinogenesis in mice

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER(2024)

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摘要
Gastrointestinal bacteria are known to have an impact on local and systemic immunity, and consequently either promote or suppress cancer development. Following the notion that perinatal bacterial exposure might confer immune system competency for life, we investigated whether early-life administration of cholera-toxin (CT), a protein exotoxin of the small intestine pathogenic bacterium Vibrio cholerae, may shape local and systemic immunity to impart a protective effect against tumor development in epithelia distantly located from the gut. For that, newborn mice were orally treated with low non-pathogenic doses of CT and later challenged with the carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA), known to cause mainly mammary, but also skin, lung and stomach cancer. Our results revealed that CT suppressed the overall incidence and multiplicity of tumors, with varying efficiencies among cancer types, and promoted survival. Harvesting mouse tissues at an earlier time-point (105 instead of 294 days), showed that CT does not prevent preneoplastic lesions per se but it rather hinders their evolution into tumors. CT pretreatment universally increased apoptosis in the cancer-prone mammary, lung and nonglandular stomach, and altered the expression of several cancer-related molecules. Moreover, CT had a long-term effect on immune system cells and factors, the most prominent being the systemic neutrophil decrease. Finally, CT treatment significantly affected gut bacterial flora composition, leading among others to a major shift from Clostridia to Bacilli class abundance. Overall, these results support the notion that early-life CT consumption is able to affect host's immune, microbiome and gene expression profiles toward the prevention of cancer. The bacteria of the gut microbiome can promote or suppress cancer development through their effect on the immune system. Here, the authors tested whether exposing newborn mice to non-pathogenic doses of cholera toxin could protect against tumor formation. The mice were exposed to 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA), which causes mammary tumors as well as skin, lung, and stomach cancer. They found that the cholera toxin did not reduce the number of preneoplastic lesions, but did stop them from progressing into cancerous tumors. The cholera toxin also shifted the composition of the gut microbiome.image
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cancer,cholera-toxin,DMBA,mice,microbiome
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