AI Article Synopsis

  • A study compared gene expression in the normal intestines of healthy individuals and colorectal cancer patients using a step biopsy procedure involving 78 participants.
  • Significant differences in gene expression were found not only between the healthy intestine regions but also in cancer patients' normal mucosa, indicating concealed alterations due to cancer.
  • These findings suggest that seemingly normal tissues in colorectal cancer patients might harbor cancer-predisposing conditions, highlighting potential pathways for new immunotherapy and treatments.

Article Abstract

A comprehensive endoscopic small and large intestinal untargeted step biopsy procedure was conducted to compare gene expression between the normal intestinal mucosa of healthy individuals and that of patients with colorectal tumors. From 78 participants (healthy individuals [n = 17], patients with colorectal conventional adenomas [n = 6], patients with Tis-T1 colorectal cancer [n = 41], patients with T2-4 colorectal cancer [n = 14]), biopsies of normal mucosa of the terminal ileum, right-sided colon (cecum and ascending colon), and left-sided colorectum (descending colon, sigmoid colon, and rectum) were obtained using a lower gastrointestinal endoscope. RNA was extracted from all samples, and total transcriptome sequencing was performed. Transcriptome data from 388 samples was analyzed. DNA was also extracted from tumor biopsy tissues and analyzed for whole-exome sequencing. In healthy individuals, gene expression differed significantly among the terminal ileum, right-sided colon, and left-sided colorectum, presumably linked to embryological factors. There were differences in gene expression in the normal mucosa in colorectal cancer patients, compared to healthy controls. Patients with tumors, especially T2-4 colorectal cancer, showed considerable variation in gene expression in non-tumor tissues, even in the terminal ileum distant from the tumor site. Based on endoscopic biopsies, the results imply cancer-predisposing conditions in seemingly normal tissues. The present study points to the importance of small intestine and cancer-predisposing conditions in the colon of colorectal cancer patients, with possible implications for developing novel immunotherapy and other therapeutic modalities.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11546198PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12943-024-02159-9DOI Listing

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