Mutational signature in colorectal cancer caused by genotoxic pks+ E. coli
Publication date
2020-04
Authors
Genomics England Research Consortium
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Article
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Abstract
Various species of the intestinal microbiota have been associated with the development of colorectal cancer 1,2, but it has not been demonstrated that bacteria have a direct role in the occurrence of oncogenic mutations. Escherichia coli can carry the pathogenicity island pks, which encodes a set of enzymes that synthesize colibactin 3. This compound is believed to alkylate DNA on adenine residues 4,5 and induces double-strand breaks in cultured cells 3. Here we expose human intestinal organoids to genotoxic pks +E. coli by repeated luminal injection over five months. Whole-genome sequencing of clonal organoids before and after this exposure revealed a distinct mutational signature that was absent from organoids injected with isogenic pks-mutant bacteria. The same mutational signature was detected in a subset of 5,876 human cancer genomes from two independent cohorts, predominantly in colorectal cancer. Our study describes a distinct mutational signature in colorectal cancer and implies that the underlying mutational process results directly from past exposure to bacteria carrying the colibactin-producing pks pathogenicity island.
Keywords
Coculture Techniques, Cohort Studies, Colorectal Neoplasms/genetics, Consensus Sequence, DNA Damage, Escherichia coli/genetics, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Genomic Islands/genetics, Humans, Mutagenesis, Mutation, Organoids/cytology, Peptides/genetics, Polyketides, Taverne, General, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Citation
Genomics England Research Consortium 2020, 'Mutational signature in colorectal cancer caused by genotoxic pks+ E. coli', Nature, vol. 580, no. 7802, pp. 269-273. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2080-8