Oral microbiome and oral and gastrointestinal cancer risk

Jiyoung Ahn, Calvin Y Chen, Richard B Hayes, Jiyoung Ahn, Calvin Y Chen, Richard B Hayes

Abstract

A growing body of evidence implicates human oral bacteria in the etiology of oral and gastrointestinal cancers. Epidemiological studies consistently report increased risks of these cancers in men and women with periodontal disease or tooth loss, conditions caused by oral bacteria. More than 700 bacterial species inhabit the oral cavity, including at least 11 bacterial phyla and 70 genera. Oral bacteria may activate alcohol and smoking-related carcinogens locally or act systemically, through chronic inflammation. High-throughput genetic-based assays now make it possible to comprehensively survey the human oral microbiome, the totality of bacteria in the oral cavity. Establishing the association of the oral microbiome with cancer risk may lead to significant advances in understanding of cancer etiology, potentially opening a new research paradigm for cancer prevention.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Oral bacteria in alcohol metabolism. Under normal physiological conditions, ethanol is metabolized to acetaldehyde by alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), and acetaldehyde is further metabolized to acetic acid by aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH). Oral bacteria have the capacity to convert ethanol to acetaldehyde, a genotoxin, leading to extended acetaldehyde exposure of the oral and gastrointestinal tract, following alcohol use, and possibly potentiated by smoking
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Human oral microbiome structure. 11 phyla and 77 genera were observed from ~ 79,000 sequences. Alignment was done using RDPII
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
The relative abundance of human oral bacteria phyla. The relative abundances of human bacterial phyla in 20 healthy subjects. 16S rRNA sequencing assay was conducted and alignment was done using RDPII

Source: PubMed

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