Maddocks Oliver D K, Short Abigail J, Donnenberg Michael S, Bader Scott, Harrison David J
Division of Pathology, Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2009;4(5):e5517. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005517. Epub 2009 May 13.
Mucosa-associated Escherichia coli are frequently found in the colonic mucosa of patients with colorectal adenocarcinoma, but rarely in healthy controls. Chronic mucosal E. coli infection has therefore been linked to colonic tumourigenesis. E. coli strains carrying eae (encoding the bacterial adhesion protein intimin) attach intimately to the intestinal mucosa and are classed as attaching and effacing E. coli (AEEC). Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) are the most common form of AEEC identified in man. EPEC utilise a type III secretion system to translocate effector proteins into host cells and infection induces wide-ranging effects on the host cell proteome. We hypothesised that EPEC infection could influence molecular pathways involved in colorectal tumourigenesis.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: When co-cultured with human colorectal cell lines, EPEC dramatically downregulated the expression of key DNA mismatch repair proteins MSH2 and MLH1 in an attachment specific manner. Cytochrome c staining and TUNEL analysis confirmed that this effect was not a consequence of apoptosis/necrosis. Ex vivo human colonic mucosa was co-cultured with EPEC and probed by immunofluorescence to locate adherent bacteria. EPEC entered 10% of colonic crypts and adhered to crypt epithelial cells, often in the proliferative compartment. Adenocarcinoma and normal colonic mucosa from colorectal cancer patients (n = 20) was probed by immunofluorescence and PCR for AEEC. Mucosa-associated E. coli were found on 10/20 (50%) adenocarcinomas and 3/20 (15%) normal mucosa samples (P<0.05). AEEC were detected on 5/20 (25%) adenocarcinomas, but not normal mucosa samples (P<0.05).
SIGNIFICANCE/CONCLUSIONS: The ability of EPEC to downregulate DNA mismatch repair proteins represents a novel gene-environment interaction that could increase the susceptibility of colonic epithelial cells to mutations and therefore promote colonic tumourigenesis. The potential role of AEEC in colorectal tumourigenesis warrants further investigation.
黏膜相关大肠杆菌在结直肠癌患者的结肠黏膜中经常被发现,但在健康对照中很少见。因此,慢性黏膜大肠杆菌感染与结肠肿瘤发生有关。携带eae(编码细菌黏附蛋白紧密素)的大肠杆菌菌株紧密附着于肠黏膜,被归类为黏附性侵袭性大肠杆菌(AEEC)。肠致病性大肠杆菌(EPEC)是在人类中鉴定出的最常见的AEEC形式。EPEC利用III型分泌系统将效应蛋白转运到宿主细胞中,感染会对宿主细胞蛋白质组产生广泛影响。我们假设EPEC感染可能影响参与结直肠癌发生的分子途径。
方法/主要发现:当与人类结肠癌细胞系共培养时,EPEC以附着特异性方式显著下调关键DNA错配修复蛋白MSH2和MLH1的表达。细胞色素c染色和TUNEL分析证实这种效应不是凋亡/坏死的结果。将离体人类结肠黏膜与EPEC共培养,并通过免疫荧光进行检测以定位附着的细菌。EPEC进入10%的结肠隐窝并附着于隐窝上皮细胞,通常在增殖区。对20例结直肠癌患者的腺癌和正常结肠黏膜进行免疫荧光和PCR检测AEEC。在10/20(5口%)的腺癌和3/20(15%)的正常黏膜样本中发现了黏膜相关大肠杆菌(P<0.05)。在5/20(25%)的腺癌中检测到AEEC,但在正常黏膜样本中未检测到(P<0.05)。
意义/结论:EPEC下调DNA错配修复蛋白的能力代表了一种新的基因-环境相互作用,可能增加结肠上皮细胞对突变的易感性,从而促进结肠肿瘤发生。AEEC在结直肠癌发生中的潜在作用值得进一步研究。