Microbiome Sex-Related Diversity in Non-Muscle-Invasive Urothelial Bladder Cancer.
Konrad BilskiNatalia Żeber-LubeckaMaria KuleckaMichalina DąbrowskaAneta BałabasJerzy OstrowskiAleksandra DobruchJakub DobruchPublished in: Current issues in molecular biology (2024)
Sex-specific discrepancies in bladder cancer (BCa) are reported, and new studies imply that microbiome may partially explain the diversity. We aim to provide characterization of the bladder microbiome in both sexes diagnosed with non-muscle-invasive BCa with specific insight into cancer grade. In our study, 16S rRNA next-generation sequencing was performed on midstream urine, bladder tumor sample, and healthy-appearing bladder mucosa. Bacterial DNA was isolated using QIAamp Viral RNA Mini Kit. Metagenomic analysis was performed using hypervariable fragments of the 16S rRNA gene on Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine platform. Of 41 sample triplets, 2153 taxa were discovered: 1739 in tumor samples, 1801 in healthy-appearing bladder mucosa and 1370 in midstream urine. Women were found to have smaller taxa richness in Chao1 index than men ( p = 0.03). In comparison to low-grade tumors, patients with high-grade lesions had lower bacterial diversity and richness in urine. Significant differences between sexes in relative abundance of communities at family level were only observed in high-grade tumors.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- low grade
- spinal cord injury
- urinary tract
- circulating tumor
- skeletal muscle
- copy number
- genome wide
- papillary thyroid
- sars cov
- antibiotic resistance genes
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- type diabetes
- cell free
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- single molecule
- machine learning
- transcription factor
- microbial community
- single cell
- muscle invasive bladder cancer
- neural network
- genome wide analysis