1. A dysbiotic mycobiome dominated by Candida albicans is identified within oral squamous-cell carcinomas.
- Author
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Perera, Manosha, Al-hebshi, Nezar Noor, Perera, Irosha, Ipe, Deepak, Ulett, Glen C., Speicher, David J., Chen, Tsute, and Johnson, Newell W.
- Subjects
SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,CANDIDA albicans ,MYCOBIOME ,TISSUES ,BIOPSY - Abstract
The aim of this study was to characterize the mycobiome associated with oral squamous-cell carcinoma (OSCC). DNA was extracted from 52 tissue biopsies (cases: 25 OSCC; controls: 27 intra-oral fibro-epithelial polyps [FEP]) and sequenced for the fungal internal transcribed spacer 2 region using Illumina™ 2 x300bp chemistry. Merged reads were classified to species level using a BLASTN-algorithm with UNITE’s named species sequences as reference. Downstream analyses were performed using QIIME™ and linear discriminant analysis effect size. A total of 364 species representing 160 genera and two phyla (Ascomycota and Basidiomycota) were identified, with Candida and Malassezia making up 48% and 11% of the average mycobiome, respectively. However, only five species and four genera were detected in ≥50% of the samples. The species richness and diversity were significantly lower in OSCC. Genera Candida,Hannaella, and Gibberella were overrepresented in OSCC;Alternaria and Trametes were more abundant in FEP. Species-wise, Candida albicans,Candida etchellsii, and a Hannaella luteola–like species were enriched in OSCC, while aHanseniaspora uvarum–like species,Malassezia restricta, andAspergillus tamariiwere the most significantly abundant in FEP. In conclusion, a dysbiotic mycobiome dominated by C. albicans was found in association with OSCC, a finding worth further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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