Health & Medicine - Posted by Jim Barlow-Oregon on Thursday, October 7, 2010 16:51 - 0 Comments    
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Do gut microbes play cancer role?

Sections of zebrafish intestines show an activating mutation of the Wnt signaling pathway produces thicker tissue (at right) as compared to a normal gut at left. (Credit: Karen Guillemin, U. Oregon)

U. OREGON (US) — Microbes matter, perhaps more than anyone realizes in biological development, and scientists now believe they could be a target for reducing cancer risks.





In a study of very basic biology of zebrafish, scientists focused on the developing intestine during its early formation in the sterile environment of its eggshell through the exposure to natural colonizing bacteria after hatching.

What they found was eye opening, says Karen Guillemin, professor of biology at the University of Oregon.

Resident microbes in the still-maturing intestine send messages that promote non-disease-related cell proliferation in the same Wnt (pronounced went) signaling pathway where genetic mutations have long been known to give rise to colorectal cancer.

The findings appear online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The complex Wnt pathway in the gut already is considered the starting point for more than 70 percent of sporadic colorectal cancers.

In the study, researchers used normal zebrafish and those harboring mutations in the Wnt pathway. They were reared under germ-free conditions and then exposed under laboratory conditions to specific microbes to define how microbial signals interact with the Wnt pathway to promote cell proliferation in the gut.

“We were able to show that microbial signals do feed into and enhance signaling in the Wnt pathway. They feed in at a point after the node where most cancer-promoting genetic mutations occur,” Guillemin says.

“What this says is that for anyone who is at risk for developing cancer because they have these mutations, it matters what microbes these mutations are associated with. These two pieces of information contribute in parallel and feed into the same pathway.”

The findings, she says, add fodder in an emerging shift in cancer research to look at the impact of microbes and other infectious causes of the disease.

“It may be that associated microbes play as significant a role in cancer risk as genetic mutations,” she says. “We need to learn more about the contributions of microbe signaling to cell proliferation.

“Maybe you could intervene with a targeted therapy. Even if you can’t fix a mutation you might manipulate the associated microbes to change the interaction and reduce unwanted cell proliferation.”

More news from University of Oregon: http://uonews.uoregon.edu/

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