Login / Signup

Microbiome and oral squamous cell carcinoma: a possible interplay on iron metabolism and its impact on tumor microenvironment.

Rodrigo Alex ArthurRafael Dos Santos BezerraJoão Paulo Bianchi XimenezBruna Laís MerlinRaphael de Andrade MorrayeJoão Valentini NetoNatália Melo Nasser FavaDavid Livingstone Alves FigueiredoCarlos Alberto Oliveira de Biaginull nullMaria Jara MontibellerJhefferson Barbosa GuimarãesEllen Gomes AlvesMonique SchreinerTiago Silva da CostaCharlie Felipe Liberati da SilvaJessica Moraes MalheirosLuan Henrique Burda da SilvaGuilherme Taborda RibasDaisy Obispo AchallmaCamila Margalho BragaKaren Flaviane Assis AndradeValquiria do Carmo Alves MartinsGlauco Vinícius Nestor Dos SantosCaroline Fabiane GranattoUlisses Costa TerinIgor Henrique SanchesDiana Estefania RamosHumberto Miguel Garay-MalpartidaGabriela Marcelino Pereira de SouzaSvetoslav Nanev SlavovWilson Araújo da Silva Junior
Published in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2021)
There is increasing evidence showing positive association between changes in oral microbiome and the occurrence of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Alcohol- and nicotine-related products can induce microbial changes but are still unknown if these changes are related to cancerous lesion sites. In an attempt to understand how these changes can influence the OSCC development and maintenance, the aim of this study was to investigate the oral microbiome linked with OSCC as well as to identify functional signatures and associate them with healthy or precancerous and cancerous sites. Our group used data of oral microbiomes available in public repositories. The analysis included data of oral microbiomes from electronic cigarette users, alcohol consumers, and precancerous and OSCC samples. An R-based pipeline was used for taxonomic and functional prediction analysis. The Streptococcus spp. genus was the main class identified in the healthy group. Haemophilus spp. predominated in precancerous lesions. OSCC samples revealed a higher relative abundance compared with the other groups, represented by an increased proportion of Fusobacterium spp., Prevotella spp., Haemophilus spp., and Campylobacter spp. Venn diagram analysis showed 52 genera exclusive of OSCC samples. Both precancerous and OSCC samples seemed to present a specific associated functional pattern. They were menaquinone-dependent protoporphyrinogen oxidase pattern enhanced in the former and both 3',5'-cyclic-nucleotide phosphodiesterase (purine metabolism) and iron(III) transport system ATP-binding protein enhanced in the latter. We conclude that although precancerous and OSCC samples present some differences on microbial profile, both microbiomes act as "iron chelators-like" potentially contributing to tumor growth.
Keyphrases