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Prebiotic proanthocyanidins inhibit bile reflux–induced esophageal adenocarcinoma through reshaping the gut microbiome and esophageal metabolome
Katherine M. Weh, Connor L. Howard, Yun Zhang, Bridget A. Tripp, Jennifer L. Clarke, Amy B. Howell, Joel H. Rubenstein, Julian A. Abrams, Maria Westerhoff, Laura A. Kresty
Katherine M. Weh, Connor L. Howard, Yun Zhang, Bridget A. Tripp, Jennifer L. Clarke, Amy B. Howell, Joel H. Rubenstein, Julian A. Abrams, Maria Westerhoff, Laura A. Kresty
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Research Article Gastroenterology Oncology

Prebiotic proanthocyanidins inhibit bile reflux–induced esophageal adenocarcinoma through reshaping the gut microbiome and esophageal metabolome

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Abstract

The gut and local esophageal microbiome progressively shift from healthy commensal bacteria to inflammation-linked pathogenic bacteria in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease, Barrett’s esophagus, and esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). However, mechanisms by which microbial communities and metabolites contribute to reflux-driven EAC remain incompletely understood and challenging to target. Herein, we utilized a rat reflux-induced EAC model to investigate targeting the gut microbiome–esophageal metabolome axis with cranberry proanthocyanidins (C-PAC) to inhibit EAC progression. Sprague-Dawley rats, with or without reflux induction, received water or C-PAC ad libitum (700 μg/rat/day) for 25 or 40 weeks. C-PAC exerted prebiotic activity abrogating reflux-induced dysbiosis and mitigating bile acid metabolism and transport, culminating in significant inhibition of EAC through TLR/NF-κB/TP53 signaling cascades. At the species level, C-PAC mitigated reflux-induced pathogenic bacteria (Streptococcus parasanguinis, Escherichia coli, and Proteus mirabilis). C-PAC specifically reversed reflux-induced bacterial, inflammatory, and immune-implicated proteins and genes, including Ccl4, Cd14, Crp, Cxcl1, Il6, Il1b, Lbp, Lcn2, Myd88, Nfkb1, Tlr2, and Tlr4, aligning with changes in human EAC progression, as confirmed through public databases. C-PAC is a safe, promising dietary constituent that may be utilized alone or potentially as an adjuvant to current therapies to prevent EAC progression through ameliorating reflux-induced dysbiosis, inflammation, and cellular damage.

Authors

Katherine M. Weh, Connor L. Howard, Yun Zhang, Bridget A. Tripp, Jennifer L. Clarke, Amy B. Howell, Joel H. Rubenstein, Julian A. Abrams, Maria Westerhoff, Laura A. Kresty

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Figure 3

Untargeted metabolomic profiling of esophagi following treatment with C-PAC in reflux-induced EAC.

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Untargeted metabolomic profiling of esophagi following treatment with C-...
(A) Untargeted metabolomics (n = 6 animals per treatment group) revealed 681 named biochemicals, with 319 and 264 significantly altered with reflux or C-PAC in the context of reflux, respectively. Principal component analysis supported variation between individual samples and treatment groups. (B) Hierarchical clustering of samples showed strong clustering based on treatment. (C) Biochemical importance plot results identified specific metabolites in superpathways of increasing importance, with random forest classification analysis providing a predictive accuracy of 94%. One-way ANOVA identified significant biochemicals (P ≤ 0.05). C-PAC, cranberry proanthocyanidins; EAC, esophageal adenocarcinoma.

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