Litcius/Paper detail

Microbiota and lung cancer

Taichiro Goto

2022Seminars in Cancer Biology81 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Until recently, bacteria have been studied in terms of their roles in infectious diseases and mainly by using isolation and culture methods. However, in practice, many bacteria existing on the earth are difficult to isolate and culture, and thus only a limited number of them have been studied to date. On the other hand, in 2005, the next-generation sequencing technology became generally available, and since then genomic analysis of bacterial flora has become widespread. As a result, it has been revealed that the lower respiratory tract, which was previously thought to be sterile, in fact has bacterial flora (a microbiome) with a high level of biodiversity. In addition, it has been found that various diseases develop and worsen depending on the balance of the bacterial flora, and in recent years, a relationship has been established between various disorders. Recent research on cancer-associated microbial communities has elucidated the reciprocal interactions among bacteria, tumors and immune cells, the bacterial pathways associated with induction of oncogenesis, and their translational significance. Nevertheless, despite the increasing evidence showing that dysbiosis is associated with lung oncogenesis, the detailed mechanisms remain to be fully elucidated. Microorganisms seem to trigger tumor initiation and progression, presumably through the production of bacterio-toxins and other pro-inflammatory factors. The purpose of this review is to present a context for the basic mechanisms and molecular functions of the airway microbiome in oncogenesis, in an effort to prevent cancer by strategies utilizing the airway microbiota, as well as summarizing the mechanisms wherein the microbiome acts as a modulator of immunotherapies in lung cancer.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeDysbiosisCarcinogenesisBiologyFlora (microbiology)Context (archaeology)Immune systemBacteriaAnaerobic bacteriaCancerImmunologyMicrobiologyComputational biologyGeneticsPaleontologyGut microbiota and healthProbiotics and Fermented FoodsCancer Research and Treatments