According to a recent study, Clostridioides difficile may be the cause of
certain colorectal malignancies.
The bacterium species Clostridioides difficile, or C. diff, which is well
recognized for causing catastrophic diarrheal illnesses, may also cause
colorectal cancer, according to data obtained by researchers at the
Bloomberg Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy and the Johns Hopkins
Kimmel Cancer Center.
This bacteria causes approximately 500,000 infections yearly in the United
States, many of which are very difficult to cure, and the study, which was
just published in the journal Cancer Discovery, may give light on another
troubling job for it.
"It's surprising how many people under 50 have received colon cancer
diagnoses in recent years. According to Cynthia Sears, M.D., the
Bloomberg-Kimmel Professor of Cancer Immunotherapy and a professor of
medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, "we discovered
that this bacterium appears to be a very unexpected contributor to colon
malignancy, the process by which normal cells become cancer.
More than half of colorectal cancer patients had bacterial biofilms, thick
colonies of bacteria on the surface of the colon, according to research done
at the Sears Lab some years ago, whereas only 10% to 15% of healthy
individuals without tumors had. When the researchers infected mice with
biofilm samples from certain colorectal cancer patients, one sample in
particular stood out to them because it markedly increased colorectal tumors
in the animals. When compared to typical controls, where tumor formation is
less than 5%, this slurry produced tumors in 85% of the mice.
In subsequent research, the scientists discovered a patient sample devoid
of a biofilm that likewise elevated colorectal cancers in the animals.
Several bacterial species, including enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis,
Fusobacterium nucleatum, and a particular strain of Escherichia coli, have
been linked to colorectal cancer. However, these microbes were either absent
from the tumors of these two patients (B. fragilis and E. coli) or failed to
successfully colonize the mice (F. nucleatum), suggesting that other
bacteria were driving the colorectal cancer cascade.
Jie (Angela) Chen, Ph.D., Jada Domingue, Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins, and
colleagues, as well as study co-author Julia Drewes, Ph.D., assistant
professor of medicine, performed additional experiments to see if a single
bacterial species or a community of bacteria were promoting tumor formation
in the mice.
They found that whereas toxigenic C. difficile, the kind that causes
diarrhea, was absent in the samples that did not result in tumors in mice,
it was present in the tumor-causing samples. This bacteria caused colon
cancers in the mice when it was put to samples that had not previously
caused tumors. Additional research revealed that C. difficile was sufficient
to cause tumor growth in the animal models on its own.
Additional studies conducted under the direction of co-author Nicholas
Markham, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of medicine at the Vanderbilt
University Medical Center, and study co-leaders Franck Housseau, Ph.D.,
associate professor of oncology at Johns Hopkins, and Ken Lau, Ph.D.,
associate professor of cell and developmental biology and surgery at the
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, revealed that C. difficile caused
a variety of changes within colon cells that made them susceptible
This bacteria activated genes that promote cancer and turned down genes
that prevent cancer in cells exposed to it. Reactive oxygen species are
unstable chemicals that may damage DNA, and these cells also sparked
immunological responses that led to detrimental inflammation.
The majority of this activity, according to the researchers, appears to be
caused by a toxin generated by this bacteria, known as TcdB. Mice infected
with TcdB-inactivated microbes produced significantly fewer tumors than mice
infected with TcdB-active microbes, while TcdA produced by C. difficile was
insufficient to cause tumors. These results were obtained using genetically
engineered C. difficile strains that contained inactivated toxin genes
and/or released a related C. difficile toxin called TcdA.
Few epidemiological studies have examined the relationship between C.
difficile and colorectal cancer in people, according to Drewes, but if this
association is discovered, screening for latent or past C. difficile
infections as cancer risk factors may be implemented. An important
prevention strategy could include increased efforts to quickly and
effectively eradicate this pathogen, which recurs — often repeatedly — in
15%-30% of infected patients after initial treatment, including in pediatric
patients. Prolonged exposures to TcdB may increase the risk of colorectal
cancer.
Although the relationship between C. difficile and colorectal cancer needs
to be confirmed in prospective, long-term cohort studies, Drewes notes that
improving prevention methods and therapeutics to lower the risk of C.
difficile primary infection and recurrence could spare patients the
immediate effects of severe diarrhea and possibly lower their risk of
developing colorectal cancer in the future.
Reference: “Human Colon Cancer–Derived Clostridioides difficile Strains
Drive Colonic Tumorigenesis in Mice” by Julia L. Drewes, Jie Chen,
Nicholas O. Markham, Reece J. Knippel, Jada C. Domingue, Ada J. Tam, June
L. Chan, Lana Kim, Madison McMann, Courtney Stevens, Christine M. Dejea,
Sarah Tomkovich, John Michel, James R. White, Fuad Mohammad, Victoria L.
Campodónico, Cody N. Heiser, Xinqun Wu, Shaoguang Wu, Hua Ding, Patricia
Simner, Karen Carroll, Martha J. Shrubsole, Robert A. Anders, Seth T.
Walk, Christian Jobin, Fengyi Wan, Robert J. Coffey, Franck Housseau, Ken
S. Lau and Cynthia L. Sears, 7 June 2022, Cancer Discovery.