Enteric fungal microbiota dysbiosis and ecological alterations in colorectal cancer

Author:

Coker Olabisi Oluwabukola,Nakatsu Geicho,Dai Rudin Zhenwei,Wu William Ka Kei,Wong Sunny HeiORCID,Ng Siew Chien,Chan Francis Ka Leung,Sung Joseph Jao Yiu,Yu JunORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesBacteriome and virome alterations are associated with colorectal cancer (CRC). Nevertheless, the gut fungal microbiota in CRC remains largely unexplored. We aimed to characterise enteric mycobiome in CRC.DesignFaecal shotgun metagenomic sequences of 184 patients with CRC, 197 patients with adenoma and 204 control subjects from Hong Kong were analysed (discovery cohort: 73 patients with CRC and 92 control subjects; validation cohort: 111 patients with CRC, 197 patients with adenoma and 112 controls from Hong Kong). CRC-associated fungal markers and ecological changes were also validated in additional independent cohorts of 90 patients with CRC, 42 patients with adenoma and 66 control subjects of published repository sequences from Germany and France. Assignment of taxonomies was performed by exact k-mer alignment against an integrated microbial reference genome database.ResultsPrincipal component analysis revealed separate clusters for CRC and control (p<0.0001), with distinct mycobiomes in early-stage and late-stage CRC (p=0.0048). Basidiomycota:Ascomycota ratio was higher in CRC (p=0.0042), with increase in Malasseziomycetes (p<0.0001) and decrease in Saccharomycetes (p<0.0001) and Pneumocystidomycetes (p=0.0017). Abundances of 14 fungal biomarkers distinguished CRC from controls with an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.93 and validated AUCs of 0.82 and 0.74 in independent Chinese cohort V1 and European cohort V2, respectively. Further ecological analysis revealed higher numbers of co-occurring fungal intrakingdom and co-exclusive bacterial–fungal correlations in CRC (p<0.0001). Moreover, co-occurrence interactions between fungi and bacteria, mostly contributed by fungal Ascomycota and bacterial Proteobacteria in control, were reverted to co-exclusive interplay in CRC (p=0.00045).ConclusionsThis study revealed CRC-associated mycobiome dysbiosis characterised by altered fungal composition and ecology, signifying that the gut mycobiome might play a role in CRC.

Funder

HMRF Hong Kong

Shenzhen Virtual University Park Support Scheme to CUHK Shenzhen Research Institute

Grant from Faculty of Medicine CUHK on Microbiota Research, RGC-GRF Hong Kong

Vice-Chancellor’s Discretionary Fund CUHK

Vice-Chancellor’s Discretionary Fund CUHK and CUHK direct grant

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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