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Title

Gut Microbiota in Lung Cancer: Where Do We Stand?

Authors

Georgiou, Konstantinos; Marinov, Blagoi; Farooqi, Ammad Ahmad; Gazouli, Maria

Abstract

The gut microbiota (GM) is considered to constitute a powerful "organ" capable of influencing the majority of the metabolic, nutritional, physiological, and immunological processes of the human body. To date, five microbial-mediated mechanisms have been revealed that either endorse or inhibit tumorigenesis. Although the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts are distant physically, they have common embryonic origin and similarity in structure. The lung microbiota is far less understood, and it is suggested that the crosslink between the human microbiome and lung cancer is a complex, multifactorial relationship. Several pathways linking their respective microbiota have reinforced the existence of a gut–lung axis (GLA). Regarding implications of specific GM in lung cancer therapy, a few studies showed that the GM considerably affects immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy by altering the differentiation of regulatory T cells and thus resulting in changes in immunomodulation mechanisms, as discovered by assessing drug metabolism directly and by assessing the host immune modulation response. Additionally, the GM may increase the efficacy of chemotherapeutic treatment in lung cancer. The mechanism underlying the role of the GLA in the pathogenesis and progression of lung cancer and its capability for diagnosis, manipulation, and treatment need to be further explored.

Subjects

GUT microbiota; REGULATORY T cells; LUNG cancer; T cell differentiation; IMMUNE checkpoint inhibitors; LUNGS

Publication

International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2021, Vol 22, Issue 19, p10429

ISSN

1661-6596

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3390/ijms221910429

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