Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the third leading cause of cancer death in the United States yet data are scant regarding host factors influencing pancreatic carcinogenesis. Increasing evidence support the role of the host microbiota in carcinogenesis but its role in PDAC is not well established. Herein, we report that antibiotic-mediated microbial depletion of KrasG12D/PTENlox/+ mice showed a decreased proportion of poorly differentiated tumors compared to microbiota-intact KrasG12D/PTENlox/+ mice. Subsequent 16S rRNA PCR showed that ~50% of KrasG12D/PTENlox/+ mice with PDAC harbored intrapancreatic bacteria. To determine if a similar observation in humans correlates with presence of PDAC, benign and malignant human pancreatic surgical specimens demonstrated a microbiota by 16S bacterial sequencing and culture confirmation. However, the microbial composition did not differentiate PDAC from non-PDAC tissue. Furthermore, murine pancreas did not naturally acquire a pancreatic microbiota, as germ-free mice transferred to specific pathogen-free housing failed to acquire intrapancreatic bacteria over time, which was not augmented by a murine model of colitis. Finally, antibiotic-mediated microbial depletion of Nod-SCID mice, compared to microbiota-intact, showed increased time to PDAC xenograft formation, smaller tumors, and attenuated growth. Interestingly, both xenograft cohorts were devoid of intratumoral bacteria by 16S rRNA PCR, suggesting that intrapancreatic/intratumoral microbiota is not the sole driver of PDAC acceleration. Xenografts from microbiota-intact mice demonstrated innate immune suppression by immunohistochemistry and differential regulation of oncogenic pathways as determined by RNA sequencing. Our work supports a long-distance role of the intestinal microbiota on PDAC progression and opens new research avenues regarding pancreatic carcinogenesis.
The hepatic tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle is central to integrating macronutrient metabolism and is closely coupled to cellular respiration, free radical generation, and inflammation. Oxidative flux through the TCA cycle is induced during hepatic insulin resistance, in mice and humans with simple steatosis, reflecting early compensatory remodeling of mitochondrial energetics. We hypothesized that progressive severity of hepatic insulin resistance and the onset of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) would impair oxidative flux through the hepatic TCA cycle. Mice (C57/BL6) were fed a high-trans-fat high-fructose diet (TFD) for 8 wk to induce simple steatosis and NASH by 24 wk. In vivo fasting hepatic mitochondrial fluxes were determined by(13)C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-based isotopomer analysis. Hepatic metabolic intermediates were quantified using mass spectrometry-based targeted metabolomics. Hepatic triglyceride accumulation and insulin resistance preceded alterations in mitochondrial metabolism, since TCA cycle fluxes remained normal during simple steatosis. However, mice with NASH had a twofold induction (P< 0.05) of mitochondrial fluxes (μmol/min) through the TCA cycle (2.6 ± 0.5 vs. 5.4 ± 0.6), anaplerosis (9.1 ± 1.2 vs. 16.9 ± 2.2), and pyruvate cycling (4.9 ± 1.0 vs. 11.1 ± 1.9) compared with their age-matched controls. Induction of the TCA cycle activity during NASH was concurrent with blunted ketogenesis and accumulation of hepatic diacylglycerols (DAGs), ceramides (Cer), and long-chain acylcarnitines, suggesting inefficient oxidation and disposal of excess free fatty acids (FFA). Sustained induction of mitochondrial TCA cycle failed to prevent accretion of "lipotoxic" metabolites in the liver and could hasten inflammation and the metabolic transition to NASH.
Pneumoperitoneum increased implantation of free intra-abdominal cancer cells at wound sites on the abdominal wall or within the abdominal cavity in this animal model. The use of pneumoperitoneum during laparoscopy in patients with colon cancer should only be performed in a protocol setting to evaluate the effect of pneumoperitoneum on the treatment of cancer.
Although melamine and cyanuric acid appeared to have low toxicity when administered separately, they induced extensive renal crystal formation when administered together. The subsequent renal failure may be similar to acute uric acid nephropathy in humans, in which crystal spherulites obstruct renal tubules.
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