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Characterizing the breast cancer lipidome and its interaction with the tissue microbiota

Characterizing the breast cancer lipidome and its interaction with the tissue microbiota
Characterizing the breast cancer lipidome and its interaction with the tissue microbiota

Breast cancer is the most diagnosed cancer amongst women worldwide. We have previously shown that there is a breast microbiota which differs between women who have breast cancer and those who are disease-free. To better understand the local biochemical perturbations occurring with disease and the potential contribution of the breast microbiome, lipid profiling was performed on non-tumor breast tissue collected from 19 healthy women and 42 with breast cancer. Here we identified unique lipid signatures between the two groups with greater amounts of lysophosphatidylcholines and oxidized cholesteryl esters in the tissue from women with breast cancer and lower amounts of ceramides, diacylglycerols, phosphatidylcholines, and phosphatidylethanolamines. By integrating these lipid signatures with the breast bacterial profiles, we observed that Gammaproteobacteria and those from the class Bacillus, were negatively correlated with ceramides, lipids with antiproliferative properties. In the healthy tissues, diacylglyerols were positively associated with Acinetobacter, Lactococcus, Corynebacterium, Prevotella and Streptococcus. These bacterial groups were found to possess the genetic potential to synthesize these lipids. The cause-effect relationships of these observations and their contribution to disease patho-mechanisms warrants further investigation for a disease afflicting millions of women around the world.

2399-3642
Giallourou, Natasa
b5891ea7-98d4-49d7-b883-2c57ca2d962a
Urbaniak, Camilla
8ad684ca-990c-4d01-8d64-29ca8c956637
Puebla-Barragan, Scarlett
7a3fafc1-15d9-40d8-b19c-d878c401f427
Vorkas, Panagiotis A
64dcbb94-b564-47bf-aef7-52f5041a4ff0
Swann, Jonathan R
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Reid, Gregor
e44904d2-b02c-4e89-8be5-1939de379d73
Giallourou, Natasa
b5891ea7-98d4-49d7-b883-2c57ca2d962a
Urbaniak, Camilla
8ad684ca-990c-4d01-8d64-29ca8c956637
Puebla-Barragan, Scarlett
7a3fafc1-15d9-40d8-b19c-d878c401f427
Vorkas, Panagiotis A
64dcbb94-b564-47bf-aef7-52f5041a4ff0
Swann, Jonathan R
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Reid, Gregor
e44904d2-b02c-4e89-8be5-1939de379d73

Giallourou, Natasa, Urbaniak, Camilla, Puebla-Barragan, Scarlett, Vorkas, Panagiotis A, Swann, Jonathan R and Reid, Gregor (2021) Characterizing the breast cancer lipidome and its interaction with the tissue microbiota. Communications Biology, 4 (1), [1229]. (doi:10.1038/s42003-021-02710-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most diagnosed cancer amongst women worldwide. We have previously shown that there is a breast microbiota which differs between women who have breast cancer and those who are disease-free. To better understand the local biochemical perturbations occurring with disease and the potential contribution of the breast microbiome, lipid profiling was performed on non-tumor breast tissue collected from 19 healthy women and 42 with breast cancer. Here we identified unique lipid signatures between the two groups with greater amounts of lysophosphatidylcholines and oxidized cholesteryl esters in the tissue from women with breast cancer and lower amounts of ceramides, diacylglycerols, phosphatidylcholines, and phosphatidylethanolamines. By integrating these lipid signatures with the breast bacterial profiles, we observed that Gammaproteobacteria and those from the class Bacillus, were negatively correlated with ceramides, lipids with antiproliferative properties. In the healthy tissues, diacylglyerols were positively associated with Acinetobacter, Lactococcus, Corynebacterium, Prevotella and Streptococcus. These bacterial groups were found to possess the genetic potential to synthesize these lipids. The cause-effect relationships of these observations and their contribution to disease patho-mechanisms warrants further investigation for a disease afflicting millions of women around the world.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 27 October 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453963
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453963
ISSN: 2399-3642
PURE UUID: 93c3bfa1-957b-4f23-a281-1a9754b16b78
ORCID for Jonathan R Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2022 17:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Natasa Giallourou
Author: Camilla Urbaniak
Author: Scarlett Puebla-Barragan
Author: Panagiotis A Vorkas
Author: Gregor Reid

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