Paired microbiome and metabolome analyses associate bile acid changes with colorectal cancer progression

T Fu, T Huan, G Rahman, H Zhi, Z Xu, TG Oh, J Guo… - Cell reports, 2023 - cell.com
T Fu, T Huan, G Rahman, H Zhi, Z Xu, TG Oh, J Guo, S Coulter, A Tripathi, C Martino
Cell reports, 2023cell.com
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is driven by genomic alterations in concert with dietary influences,
with the gut microbiome implicated as an effector in disease development and progression.
While meta-analyses have provided mechanistic insight into patients with CRC, study
heterogeneity has limited causal associations. Using multi-omics studies on genetically
controlled cohorts of mice, we identify diet as the major driver of microbial and metabolomic
differences, with reductions in α diversity and widespread changes in cecal metabolites …
Summary
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is driven by genomic alterations in concert with dietary influences, with the gut microbiome implicated as an effector in disease development and progression. While meta-analyses have provided mechanistic insight into patients with CRC, study heterogeneity has limited causal associations. Using multi-omics studies on genetically controlled cohorts of mice, we identify diet as the major driver of microbial and metabolomic differences, with reductions in α diversity and widespread changes in cecal metabolites seen in high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. In addition, non-classic amino acid conjugation of the bile acid cholic acid (AA-CA) increased with HFD. We show that AA-CAs impact intestinal stem cell growth and demonstrate that Ileibacterium valens and Ruminococcus gnavus are able to synthesize these AA-CAs. This multi-omics dataset implicates diet-induced shifts in the microbiome and the metabolome in disease progression and has potential utility in future diagnostic and therapeutic developments.
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