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Diet, Microbes, and Cancer Across the Tree of Life: a Systematic Review.

Stefania E KapsetakiGissel Marquez AlcarazCarlo C MaleyCorrie M WhisnerAthena Aktipis
Published in: Current nutrition reports (2022)
Some microbes, such as Helicobacter bacteria, papillomaviruses, and the carnivore-associated Fusobacteria, consistently induce tumorigenesis in humans and other species. Other microbes, such as the milk-associated Lactobacillus, consistently inhibit tumorigenesis in humans and other species. We systematically reviewed over a thousand published articles and identified links between diet, microbes, and cancers in several species of mammals, birds, and flies. Future work should examine a larger variety of host species to discover new model organisms for human preclinical trials, to better understand the observed variance in cancer prevalence across species, and to discover which microbes and diets are associated with cancers across species. Ultimately, this could help identify microbial and dietary interventions to diagnose, prevent, and treat cancers in humans as well as other animals.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • genetic diversity
  • weight loss
  • papillary thyroid
  • stem cells
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • risk factors
  • multidrug resistant
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • bone marrow