Certain bacteria in breast tumour environments may fuel cancer spread (Feb 2025, mice) Identification of intratumoral bacteria that enhance breast tumor metastasis Causation 

Michael Harrop

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https://www.med.ubc.ca/news/certain-bacteria-in-breast-tumour-environments-may-fuel-cancer-spread/
https://journals.asm.org/doi/full/10.1128/mbio.03595-24

While researchers have previously found bacteria to influence cancer growth, it is not well understood how bacteria within the tumour microenvironment impact metastasis, which is a major cause of cancer-related deaths.


The Dedhar and Finlay research teams discovered that a type of bacteria called Bacillus thermoamylovorans, found only in metastatic tumours, made tumour cells spread more aggressively and altered their metabolism.

ABSTRACT​

The central, mortality-associated hallmark of cancer is the process of metastasis. It is increasingly recognized that bacteria influence multiple facets of cancer progression, but the extent to which tumor microenvironment-associated bacteria control metastasis in cancer is poorly understood.

To identify tumor-associated bacteria and their role in metastasis, we utilized established murine models of non-metastatic and metastatic breast tumors to identify bacteria capable of driving metastatic disease. We found several species of the Bacillus genus that were unique to metastatic tumors, and found that breast tumor cells cultured with a Bacillus bacterium isolated from metastatic tumors, Bacillus thermoamylovorans, produced nearly 3× the metastatic burden as control cells or cells cultured with bacteria from non-metastatic breast tumors. We then performed targeted metabolomics on tumor cells cultured with different bacterial species and found that B. thermoamylovorans differentially regulated tumor cell metabolite profiles compared to bacteria isolated from non-metastatic tumors. Using these bacteria, we performed de novo sequencing and tested for the presence of genes that were unique to the bacterium isolated from metastatic tumors in a patient population to provide a proof-of-concept for identifying how specific bacterial functions are associated with the metastatic process in cancer independent of bacterial species.

Together, our data directly demonstrate the ability of specific bacteria to promote metastasis through interaction with cancer cells.

IMPORTANCE​

Metastasis is a major barrier to long-term survival for cancer patients, and therapeutic options for patients with aggressive, metastatic forms of breast cancer remain limited. It is therefore critical to understand the differences between non-metastatic and metastatic disease to identify potential methods for slowing or even stopping metastasis. In this work, we identify a bacterial species present with metastatic breast tumors capable of increasing the metastatic capabilities of tumor cells. We isolated and sequenced this bacteria, as well as a control species which failed to promote metastasis, and identified specific bacterial genes that were unique to the metastasis-promoting species. We tested for the presence of these bacterial genes in patient tumor samples and found they were more likely to be associated with mortality. We also identified enrichment of specific bacterial functions, providing insight into possible sources of bacteria-driven increases in the metastatic potential of multiple cancer types.
 
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