您当前的位置: 首页 > 资源详情

First-Ever Mycobiome Atlas Describes Associations between Cancers and Fungi

来源机构: 加州大学圣地亚哥分校    发布时间:2022-9-29点击量:1

An international team of scientists, co-led by researchers at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, has created the first pan-cancer mycobiome atlas — a survey of 35 types of cancer and their associated fungi.

The findings are published September 29, 2022 in the journal Cell.

Cancer cells and microbes have a long and enduring association. Both have coevolved within the ecosystems of the human body, often relying on the same resources. Competition for these resources often affects the replication and survival of cancer cells, microbes and the human host.

The association between cancer and individual microbes has long been studied case-by-case, but much recent attention focuses on the whole human microbiome, particularly in the gut, which houses more — and more diverse — communities of bacteria, viruses and fungi than anywhere else in or on the human body.

However, the roles and influence of cancer-associated fungi remain largely unstudied and unknown. Fungi are more complicated organisms than viruses and bacteria. They are eukaryotes — organisms with cells containing nuclei. Their cells are much more similar to animal cells than to bacteria or viruses.

“The existence of fungi in most human cancers is both a surprise and to be expected,” said Rob Knight, PhD, professor in the departments of Pediatrics at UC San Diego School of Medicine and Bioengineering and Computer Science at UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, Wolfe Family Endowed Chair in Microbiome Research at Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego and co-founder of Micronoma, a San Diego-based company developing microbial biomarkers in blood and tissues to diagnose and treat cancers.

“It is surprising because we don’t know how fungi could get into tumors throughout the body. But it is also expected because it fits the pattern of healthy microbiomes throughout the body, including the gut, mouth and skin, where bacteria and fungi interact as part of a complex community.”

Fungi found on the human body come in two main types: environmental fungi, such as yeasts and mold that generally pose no harm to most healthy people, and commensal fungi, which live on or inside the human body and may be harmless, provide a benefit such as improving gut health or contribute to disease, such as yeast infections or liver disease. Fungi also play a role in shaping host immunity, for better or worse, which looms large in immunocompromised persons, including cancer patients.

The new study characterizes the cancer mycobiome — fungi linked to cancers — in 17,401 samples of patient tissues, blood and plasma across 35 types of cancer in four independent cohorts. The researchers found fungal DNA and cells in low abundances across many major human cancers, with differences in community compositions that differed among cancer types.

“The finding that fungi are commonly present in human tumors should drive us to better explore their potential effects and re-examine almost everything we know about cancer through a ‘microbiome lens,’” said co-corresponding author Ravid Straussman, MD, PhD, a principal investigator at Weizmann Institute of Science.

Analyses that compared fungal communities with matched bacteriomes (the bacterial component of the microbiome) and immunomes (genes and proteins constituting the immune system) revealed that the associations between them were often “permissive,” rather than competitive.

提供服务:导出本资源

版权所有@2017中国科学院文献情报中心

制作维护:中国科学院文献情报中心信息系统部地址:北京中关村北四环西路33号邮政编号:100190