Association of Bacteroides acidifaciens relative abundance with high-fibre diet-associated radiosensitisation

Chee Kin Then, Salome Paillas, Xuedan Wang, Alix Hampson, Anne E. Kiltie* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

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27 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Background: Patients with pelvic malignancies often receive radiosensitising chemotherapy with radiotherapy to improve survival; however, this is at the expense of increased normal tissue toxicity, particularly in elderly patients. Here, we explore if an alternative, low-cost, and non-toxic approach can achieve radiosensitisation in mice transplanted with human bladder cancer cells. Other investigators have shown slower growth of transplanted tumours in mice fed high-fibre diets. We hypothesised that mice fed a high-fibre diet would have improved tumour control following ionising radiation (IR) and that this would be mediated through the gut microbiota. Results: We investigated the effects of four different diets (low-fibre, soluble high-fibre, insoluble high-fibre, and mixed soluble/insoluble high-fibre diets) on tumour growth in immunodeficient mice implanted with human bladder cancer flank xenografts and treated with ionising radiation, simultaneously investigating the composition of their gut microbiomes by 16S rRNA sequencing. A significantly higher relative abundance of Bacteroides acidifaciens was seen in the gut (faecal) microbiome of the soluble high-fibre group, and the soluble high-fibre diet resulted in delayed tumour growth after irradiation compared to the other groups. Within the soluble high-fibre group, responders to irradiation had significantly higher abundance of B. acidifaciens than non-responders. When all mice fed with different diets were pooled, an association was found between the survival time of mice and relative abundance of B. acidifaciens. The gut microbiome in responders was predicted to be enriched for carbohydrate metabolism pathways, and in vitro experiments on the transplanted human bladder cancer cell line suggested a role for microbial-generated short-chain fatty acids and/or other metabolites in the enhanced radiosensitivity of the tumour cells. Conclusions: Soluble high-fibre diets sensitised tumour xenografts to irradiation, and this phenotype was associated with modification of the microbiome and positively correlated with B. acidifaciens abundance. Our findings might be exploitable for improving radiotherapy response in human patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102
Number of pages16
JournalBMC Biology
Volume18
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Aug 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was funded by Cancer Research UK Programme grant C5255/ A23755 and Wellcome Trust Investigator Award 209397/Z/17/Z. The funding body had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; or in the writing of the manuscript.

Acknowledgements
We thank Professor Simon Kroll and Dr. Anderson Ryan for their very helpful comments. We thank Dr. Jia-Yu Ke at Research Diets, Inc. for formulation of the mouse diets, Dr. Lisa Folkes for assistance with the faecal butyrate quantification, and Omega Bioservices (Georgia, USA) for the 16S rRNA gene sequencing on a MiSeq platform.

Keywords

  • B. Acidifaciens
  • Cellulose
  • Dietary fibre
  • Gut microbiome
  • Inulin
  • Parabacteroides
  • Pelvic tumour
  • Radiosensitisation
  • Radiotherapy

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