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Impact of preoperative antibiotics and other variables on integrated microbiome-host transcriptomic data generated from colorectal cancer resections
- Source :
- World Journal of Gastroenterology
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Baishideng Publishing Group Inc., 2021.
-
Abstract
- Background Integrative multi-omic approaches have been increasingly applied to discovery and functional studies of complex human diseases. Short-term preoperative antibiotics have been adopted to reduce site infections in colorectal cancer (CRC) resections. We hypothesize that the antibiotics will impact analysis of multi-omic datasets generated from resection samples to investigate biological CRC risk factors. Aim To assess the impact of preoperative antibiotics and other variables on integrated microbiome and human transcriptomic data generated from archived CRC resection samples. Methods Genomic DNA (gDNA) and RNA were extracted from prospectively collected 51 pairs of frozen sporadic CRC tumor and adjacent non-tumor mucosal samples from 50 CRC patients archived at a single medical center from 2010-2020. The 16S rRNA gene sequencing (V3V4 region, paired end, 300 bp) and confirmatory quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) assays were conducted on gDNA. RNA sequencing (IPE, 125 bp) was performed on parallel tumor and non-tumor RNA samples with RNA Integrity Numbers scores ≥ 6. Results PERMANOVA detected significant effects of tumor vs nontumor histology (P = 0.002) and antibiotics (P = 0.001) on microbial β-diversity, but CRC tumor location (left vs right), diabetes mellitus vs not diabetic and Black/African Ancestry (AA) vs not Black/AA, did not reach significance. Linear mixed models detected significant tumor vs nontumor histology*antibiotics interaction terms for 14 genus level taxa. QPCR confirmed increased Fusobacterium abundance in tumor vs nontumor groups, and detected significantly reduced bacterial load in the (+)antibiotics group. Principal coordinate analysis of the transcriptomic data showed a clear separation between tumor and nontumor samples. Differentially expressed genes obtained from separate analyses of tumor and nontumor samples, are presented for the antibiotics, CRC location, diabetes and Black/AA race groups. Conclusion Recent adoption of additional preoperative antibiotics as standard of care, has a measurable impact on -omics analysis of resected specimens. This study still confirmed increased Fusobacterium nucleatum in tumor.
- Subjects :
- Oncology
medicine.medical_specialty
Colorectal cancer
medicine.drug_class
Antibiotics
RNA-sequencing
03 medical and health sciences
Diabetes mellitus
0302 clinical medicine
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Retrospective Cohort Study
Microbiome
African Continental Ancestry Group
biology
business.industry
Microbiota
Gastroenterology
General Medicine
Omics
medicine.disease
biology.organism_classification
Anti-Bacterial Agents
genomic DNA
Real-time polymerase chain reaction
Fusobacterium
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
030211 gastroenterology & hepatology
16S rRNA gene
Fusobacterium nucleatum
Colorectal Neoplasms
Transcriptome
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10079327
- Volume :
- 27
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- World Journal of Gastroenterology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....95730aec150e4e93ad1681ff90a809bd
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v27.i14.1465