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      The Colorectal Cancer Microbiota Alter Their Transcriptome To Adapt to the Acidity, Reactive Oxygen Species, and Metabolite Availability of Gut Microenvironments

      research-article
      a , , b , c , d , e , a ,
      mSphere
      American Society for Microbiology
      colorectal cancer, metatranscriptome, gut microbiota, reactive oxygen species, acidity, virulence

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          ABSTRACT

          The gut microbiome is implicated in the pathology of colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the mechanisms by which the microbiota actively contribute to disease onset and progression remain elusive. In this pilot study, we sequenced fecal metatranscriptomes of 10 non-CRC and 10 CRC patient gut microbiomes and conducted differential gene expression analyses to assess any changed functionality in disease. We report that oxidative stress responses were the dominant activity across cohorts, an overlooked protective housekeeping role of the human gut microbiome. However, expression of hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide-scavenging genes was diminished and augmented, respectively, positing that these regulated microbial responses have implications for CRC pathology. CRC microbes enhanced expression of genes for host colonization, biofilm formation, genetic exchange, virulence determinants, antibiotic, and acid resistances. Moreover, microbes promoted transcription of genes involved in metabolism of several beneficial metabolites, suggesting their contribution to patient metabolite deficiencies previously solely attributed to tumor cells. We showed in vitro that expression of genes involved in amino acid-dependent acid resistance mechanisms of meta-gut Escherichia coli responded differently to acid, salt, and oxidative pressures under aerobic conditions. These responses were mostly dictated by the host health status of origin of the microbiota, suggesting their exposure to fundamentally different gut conditions. These findings for the first time highlight mechanisms by which the gut microbiota can either protect against or drive colorectal cancer and provide insights into the cancerous gut environment that drives functional characteristics of the microbiome.

          IMPORTANCE The human gut microbiota has the genetic potential to drive colorectal cancer onset and progression; however, the expression of this genetic potential during the disease has not been investigated. We found that microbial expression of genes that detoxify DNA-damaging reactive oxygen species, which drive colorectal cancer, is compromised in cancer. We observed a greater activation of expression of genes involved in virulence, host colonization, exchange of genetic material, metabolite utilization, defense against antibiotics, and environmental pressures. Culturing gut Escherichia coli of cancerous and noncancerous metamicrobiota revealed different regulatory responses of amino acid-dependent acid resistance mechanisms in a health-dependent manner under environmental acid, oxidative, and osmotic pressures. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate that the activity of microbial genomes is regulated by the health status of the gut in vivo and in vitro and provides new insights for shifts in microbial gene expression in colorectal cancer.

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          Most cited references99

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          Moderated estimation of fold change and dispersion for RNA-seq data with DESeq2

          In comparative high-throughput sequencing assays, a fundamental task is the analysis of count data, such as read counts per gene in RNA-seq, for evidence of systematic changes across experimental conditions. Small replicate numbers, discreteness, large dynamic range and the presence of outliers require a suitable statistical approach. We present DESeq2, a method for differential analysis of count data, using shrinkage estimation for dispersions and fold changes to improve stability and interpretability of estimates. This enables a more quantitative analysis focused on the strength rather than the mere presence of differential expression. The DESeq2 package is available at http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/DESeq2.html. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13059-014-0550-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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            Trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for Illumina sequence data

            Motivation: Although many next-generation sequencing (NGS) read preprocessing tools already existed, we could not find any tool or combination of tools that met our requirements in terms of flexibility, correct handling of paired-end data and high performance. We have developed Trimmomatic as a more flexible and efficient preprocessing tool, which could correctly handle paired-end data. Results: The value of NGS read preprocessing is demonstrated for both reference-based and reference-free tasks. Trimmomatic is shown to produce output that is at least competitive with, and in many cases superior to, that produced by other tools, in all scenarios tested. Availability and implementation: Trimmomatic is licensed under GPL V3. It is cross-platform (Java 1.5+ required) and available at http://www.usadellab.org/cms/index.php?page=trimmomatic Contact: usadel@bio1.rwth-aachen.de Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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              Fast and sensitive protein alignment using DIAMOND.

              The alignment of sequencing reads against a protein reference database is a major computational bottleneck in metagenomics and data-intensive evolutionary projects. Although recent tools offer improved performance over the gold standard BLASTX, they exhibit only a modest speedup or low sensitivity. We introduce DIAMOND, an open-source algorithm based on double indexing that is 20,000 times faster than BLASTX on short reads and has a similar degree of sensitivity.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                mSphere
                mSphere
                msphere
                mSphere
                American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2379-5042
                27 February 2023
                Mar-Apr 2023
                27 February 2023
                : 8
                : 2
                : e00627-22
                Affiliations
                [a ] Centre for Sports, Exercise and Life Sciences, Coventry University, Coventry, United Kingdom
                [b ] Division of Biomedical Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Warwick, United Kingdom
                [c ] Department of Gastroenterology, University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire, National Health Service Trust, Coventry, United Kingdom
                [d ] University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom
                [e ] School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Liverpool John Moors University, Liverpool, United Kingdom
                University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
                Author notes

                The authors declare no conflict of interest.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0927-0309
                Article
                00627-22 msphere.00627-22
                10.1128/msphere.00627-22
                10117117
                36847536
                dbe05273-122b-43bd-85a8-8b4d77f0019d
                Copyright © 2023 Lamaudière et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

                History
                : 14 December 2022
                : 28 January 2023
                Page count
                supplementary-material: 8, Figures: 5, Tables: 2, Equations: 0, References: 100, Pages: 19, Words: 14018
                Funding
                Funded by: Coventry University (CU), FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001313;
                Award Recipient :
                Funded by: University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust (UHCW), FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/501100022292;
                Award Recipient :
                Categories
                Research Article
                clinical-microbiology, Clinical Microbiology
                Custom metadata
                March/April 2023

                colorectal cancer,metatranscriptome,gut microbiota,reactive oxygen species,acidity,virulence

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