Dysbiosis of the Salivary Microbiome Is Associated With Non-smoking Female Lung Cancer and Correlated With Immunocytochemistry Markers

Association between oral bacteria and increased risk of lung cancer have been reported in several previous studies, however, the potential association between salivary microbiome and lung cancer in non-smoking women have not been evaluated. There is also no report on the relationship between immunoc...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers in oncology Vol. 8; p. 520
Main Authors Yang, Junjie, Mu, Xiaofeng, Wang, Ye, Zhu, Dequan, Zhang, Jiaming, Liang, Cheng, Chen, Bin, Wang, Jingwen, Zhao, Changying, Zuo, Zhiwen, Heng, Xueyuan, Zhang, Chunling, Zhang, Lei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 2018
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Association between oral bacteria and increased risk of lung cancer have been reported in several previous studies, however, the potential association between salivary microbiome and lung cancer in non-smoking women have not been evaluated. There is also no report on the relationship between immunocytochemistry markers and salivary microbiota. In this study, we assessed the salivary microbiome of 75 non-smoking female lung cancer patients and 172 matched healthy individuals using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. We also calculated the Spearman's rank correlation coefficient between salivary microbiota and three immunohistochemical markers (TTF-1, Napsin A and CK7). We analyzed the salivary microbiota of 247 subjects and found that non-smoking female lung cancer patients exhibited oral microbial dysbiosis. There was significantly lower microbial diversity and richness in lung cancer patients when compared to the control group (Shannon index, < 0.01; Ace index, < 0.0001). Based on the analysis of similarities, the composition of the microbiota in lung cancer patients also differed from that of the control group (r = 0.454, < 0.001, unweighted UniFrac; r = 0.113, < 0.01, weighted UniFrac). The bacterial genera ( < 0.05) and ( < 0.0001) were relatively higher in non-smoking female lung cancer patients, whereas ( < 0.001) and ( < 0.01) were higher in controls. Based on Spearman's correlation analysis, a significantly positive correlation can be observed between CK7 and Enterobacteriaceae (r = 0.223, < 0.05). At the same time, Napsin A was positively associated with genera (r = 0.251, < 0.05). TTF-1 exhibited a significantly positive correlation with Enterobacteriaceae (r = 0.262, < 0.05). Functional analysis from inferred metagenomes indicated that oral microbiome in non-smoking female lung cancer patients were related to cancer pathways, p53 signaling pathway, apoptosis and tuberculosis. The study identified distinct salivary microbiome profiles in non-smoking female lung cancer patients, revealed potential correlations between salivary microbiome and immunocytochemistry markers used in clinical diagnostics, and provided proof that salivary microbiota can be an informative source for discovering non-invasive lung cancer biomarkers.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Reviewed by: Janaki Deepak, University of Maryland, Baltimore, United States; Meng Xu Welliver, The Ohio State University, United States
Edited by: Marco Lucchi, Università degli Studi di Pisa, Italy
This article was submitted to Thoracic Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Oncology
ISSN:2234-943X
2234-943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2018.00520