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. 2018 Sep;1859(9):958-974.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2018.04.002. Epub 2018 Apr 13.

Lithocholic acid, a bacterial metabolite reduces breast cancer cell proliferation and aggressiveness

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Free article

Lithocholic acid, a bacterial metabolite reduces breast cancer cell proliferation and aggressiveness

Edit Mikó et al. Biochim Biophys Acta Bioenerg. 2018 Sep.
Free article

Abstract

Our study aimed at finding a mechanistic relationship between the gut microbiome and breast cancer. Breast cancer cells are not in direct contact with these microbes, but disease could be influenced by bacterial metabolites including secondary bile acids that are exclusively synthesized by the microbiome and known to enter the human circulation. In murine and bench experiments, a secondary bile acid, lithocholic acid (LCA) in concentrations corresponding to its tissue reference concentrations (< 1 μM), reduced cancer cell proliferation (by 10-20%) and VEGF production (by 37%), aggressiveness and metastatic potential of primary tumors through inducing mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition, increased antitumor immune response, OXPHOS and the TCA cycle. Part of these effects was due to activation of TGR5 by LCA. Early stage breast cancer patients, versus control women, had reduced serum LCA levels, reduced chenodeoxycholic acid to LCA ratio, and reduced abundance of the baiH (7α/β-hydroxysteroid dehydroxylase, the key enzyme in LCA generation) gene in fecal DNA, all suggesting reduced microbial generation of LCA in early breast cancer.

Keywords: Breast cancer; Endothelial-mesenchymal transition; Lithocholic acid; Microbiome; OXPHOS; TGR5.

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