Mathlouthi Nour El Houda, Oumarou Hama Hamadou, Belguith Imen, Charfi Slim, Boudawara Tahya, Lagier Jean-Christophe, Ammar Keskes Leila, Grine Ghiles, Gdoura Radhouane
Laboratoire de Recherche Toxicologie Microbiologie Environnementale et Santé (LR17ES06), Faculté des Sciences de Sfax, Université de Sfax, Sfax 3000, Tunisia.
IHU Méditerranée Infection, UMR MEPHI, 19-21, Bd. Jean Moulin, 13005 Marseille, France.
Curr Issues Mol Biol. 2023 Sep 19;45(9):7572-7581. doi: 10.3390/cimb45090477.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a serious public health problem known to have a multifactorial etiology. The association between gut microbiota and CRC has been widely studied; however, the link between archaea and CRC has not been sufficiently studied. To investigate the involvement of archaea in colorectal carcinogenesis, we performed a metagenomic analysis of 68 formalin-embedded paraffin fixed tissues from tumoral ( = 33) and healthy mucosa ( = 35) collected from 35 CRC Tunisian patients. We used two DNA extraction methods: Generead DNA FFPE kit (Qiagen, Germantown, MD, USA) and Chelex. We then sequenced the samples using Illumina Miseq. Interestingly, DNA extraction exclusively using Chelex generated enough DNA for sequencing of all samples. After data filtering and processing, we reported the presence of archaeal sequences, which represented 0.33% of all the reads generated. In terms of abundance, we highlighted a depletion in methanogens and an enrichment in in the tumor tissues, while the correlation analysis revealed a significant association between the and the tumor mucosa ( < 0.05). We reported a strong correlation between , , and tumor tissues, and a weak correlation between and healthy adjacent mucosa. Here, we demonstrated the feasibility of archaeome analysis from formol fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues using simple protocols ranging from sampling to data analysis, and reported a significant association between and tumor tissues in Tunisian patients with CRC. The importance of our study is that it represents the first metagenomic analysis of Tunisian CRC patients' gut microbiome, which consists of sequencing DNA extracted from paired tumor-adjacent FFPE tissues collected from CRC patients. The detection of archaeal sequences in our samples confirms the feasibility of carrying out an archaeome analysis from FFPE tissues using a simple DNA extraction protocol. Our analysis revealed the enrichment of , especially , in tumor mucosa compared to the normal mucosa in CRC Tunisian patients. Other species were also associated with CRC, including and , which is a methanogenic archaea; both species were found to be correlated with adjacent healthy tissues.
结直肠癌(CRC)是一个严重的公共卫生问题,已知其病因是多因素的。肠道微生物群与CRC之间的关联已得到广泛研究;然而,古菌与CRC之间的联系尚未得到充分研究。为了研究古菌在结直肠癌发生中的作用,我们对来自35名突尼斯CRC患者的68份福尔马林固定石蜡包埋组织进行了宏基因组分析,其中肿瘤组织(n = 33)和健康黏膜组织(n = 35)各34份。我们使用了两种DNA提取方法:Generead DNA FFPE试剂盒(Qiagen,美国马里兰州日耳曼敦)和Chelex。然后,我们使用Illumina Miseq对样本进行测序。有趣的是,仅使用Chelex提取DNA就为所有样本的测序产生了足够的DNA。经过数据过滤和处理,我们报告了古菌序列的存在,其占所有产生的读数的0.33%。在丰度方面,我们强调肿瘤组织中产甲烷菌减少而[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]增加,而相关性分析显示[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]与肿瘤黏膜之间存在显著关联(P < 0.05)。我们报告了[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]、[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]与肿瘤组织之间存在强相关性,而[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]与健康相邻黏膜之间存在弱相关性。在这里,我们证明了使用从采样到数据分析的简单方案对福尔马林固定石蜡包埋(FFPE)组织进行古菌组分析的可行性,并报告了突尼斯CRC患者中[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]与肿瘤组织之间存在显著关联。我们研究的重要性在于,它代表了对突尼斯CRC患者肠道微生物组的首次宏基因组分析,该分析包括对从CRC患者收集的配对肿瘤 - 相邻FFPE组织中提取的DNA进行测序。我们样本中古菌序列的检测证实了使用简单的DNA提取方案从FFPE组织进行古菌组分析的可行性。我们的分析揭示了在突尼斯CRC患者中,与正常黏膜相比,肿瘤黏膜中[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称],尤其是[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]的富集。其他物种也与CRC相关,包括[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称]和[此处原文缺失相关古菌名称],后者是一种产甲烷古菌;这两个物种都被发现与相邻健康组织相关。