Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Department of Biochemistry, Rush University, Chicago, Illinois.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2020;10(4):729-746. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2020.05.010. Epub 2020 Jun 1.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Vitamin D exerts regulatory roles via vitamin D receptor (VDR) in mucosal immunity, host defense, and inflammation involving host factors and microbiome. Human Vdr gene variation shapes the microbiome and VDR deletion leads to dysbiosis. Low VDR expression and diminished vitamin D/VDR signaling are observed in colon cancer. Nevertheless, how intestinal epithelial VDR is involved in tumorigenesis through gut microbiota remains unknown. We hypothesized that intestinal VDR protects mice against dysbiosis via modulating the Janus kinase (JAK)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) pathway in tumorigenesis.
To test our hypothesis, we used an azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium-induced cancer model in intestinal VDR conditional knockout (VDR) mice, cell cultures, stem cell-derived colonoids, and human colon cancer samples.
VDR mice have higher numbers of tumors, with the location shifted from the distal to proximal colon. Fecal microbiota analysis showed that VDR deletion leads to a bacterial profile shift from normal to susceptible carcinogenesis. We found enhanced bacterial staining in mouse and human tumors. Microbial metabolites from VDR mice showed increased secondary bile acids, consistent with observations in human CRC. We further identified that VDR protein bound to the Jak2 promoter, suggesting that VDR transcriptionally regulated Jak2. The JAK/STAT pathway is critical in intestinal and microbial homeostasis. Fecal samples from VDR mice activate the STAT3 signaling in human and mouse organoids. Lack of VDR led to hyperfunction of Jak2 in response to intestinal dysbiosis. A JAK/STAT inhibitor abolished the microbiome-induced activation of STAT3.
We provide insights into the mechanism of VDR dysfunction leading to dysbiosis and tumorigenesis. It indicates a new target: microbiome and VDR for the prevention of cancer.
维生素 D 通过维生素 D 受体(VDR)在黏膜免疫、宿主防御和炎症中发挥调节作用,涉及宿主因素和微生物组。人类 Vdr 基因变异塑造了微生物组,而 VDR 缺失会导致菌群失调。结肠癌中观察到 VDR 表达降低和维生素 D/VDR 信号减弱。然而,肠道上皮细胞中的 VDR 如何通过肠道微生物群参与肿瘤发生仍不清楚。我们假设,肠道 VDR 通过调节肿瘤发生过程中的 Janus 激酶(JAK)/信号转导和转录激活因子(STAT)通路来保护小鼠免受菌群失调的影响。
为了验证我们的假设,我们使用了一种在肠道 VDR 条件性敲除(VDR)小鼠、细胞培养物、干细胞衍生的结肠类器官和人类结肠癌样本中诱导的氧化偶氮甲烷/葡聚糖硫酸钠诱导的癌症模型。
VDR 小鼠的肿瘤数量更多,位置从远端结肠转移到近端结肠。粪便微生物组分析表明,VDR 缺失导致细菌谱从正常向易发生致癌的方向转变。我们在小鼠和人类肿瘤中发现了增强的细菌染色。来自 VDR 小鼠的微生物代谢物显示出增加的次级胆汁酸,与 CRC 中的观察结果一致。我们进一步发现,VDR 蛋白与 Jak2 启动子结合,表明 VDR 转录调控 Jak2。JAK/STAT 通路在肠道和微生物稳态中至关重要。来自 VDR 小鼠的粪便样本在人类和小鼠类器官中激活了 STAT3 信号。缺乏 VDR 导致 Jak2 在肠道菌群失调时过度激活。JAK/STAT 抑制剂消除了微生物群诱导的 STAT3 激活。
我们提供了有关 VDR 功能障碍导致菌群失调和肿瘤发生的机制的见解。这表明了一个新的目标:微生物组和 VDR 可用于预防癌症。