Specific Intratumor Bacteria Genera and TRG Recombinations Associated with Greater Survival Probability in Alimentary Tract Cancers.

J Gastrointest Cancer

Department of Molecular Medicine, Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa Florida, 33612, USA.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of intratumoral bacteria on T-cell features in gastric and esophageal cancers, revealing that higher levels of Klebsiella are linked to improved patient survival rates.
  • Analysis focused on cases from The Cancer Genome Atlas, utilizing RNA-seq data and T-cell receptor sequencing to gather insights on bacterial abundance in tumors.
  • The findings suggest a connection between specific bacteria and T-cell infiltration, indicating that gamma-delta T cells may influence bacterial dynamics in these cancers.

Article Abstract

Introduction: There remains a lack of knowledge regarding the effects of the intratumor microbiome on the tumor immune milieu. We aimed to investigate whether intratumoral bacterial RNA sequence abundance in gastric and esophageal cancers is associated with T-cell infiltrate features.

Methods: We assessed cases representing the stomach adenocarcinoma (STAD) and esophageal cancer (ESCA) databases of The Cancer Genome Atlas. RNA-seq data estimating intratumoral bacterial abundance was obtained from publicly available sources. TCR recombination reads were mined from exome files. Survival models were generated using the lifelines python package.

Results: Increasing levels of the Klebsiella genus were associated with a better OS probability (hazard ratio, 0.5), via a Cox proportional hazards model. The higher Klebsiella abundance was associated with a significantly increased overall (p = 0.0001) and disease-specific survival (p = 0.0289) probability for the STAD dataset. Cases representing the upper 50th percentile of Klebsiella abundance also represented a significantly increased recovery of TRG and TRD recombination reads (p = 0.00192). Analogous results were found for the Aquincola genus in ESCA.

Conclusions: This is the first report of associations between low biomass bacterial samples from primary tumor samples with patient survival and with an increased gamma-delta T cell infiltrate. Results indicate that the gamma-delta T cells potentially play a role in the dynamics of the bacterial infiltration of primary tumors of the alimentary tract.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12029-023-00935-2DOI Listing

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