Project

Microbial drivers of colorectal cancer development and therapy

Code
365V05625
Duration
01 January 2025 → 31 December 2028
Funding
Funding by bilateral agreement (private and foundations)
Research disciplines
  • Medical and health sciences
    • Gastro-enterology
    • Inflammation
    • Microbiome
    • Cancer biology
    • Cancer therapy
Keywords
microbiota colorectal cancer Germfree and gnotobiotic mouse technology
 
Project description

The microbiota influences both initiation, progression and therapy response in colorectal cancer (CRC). The underlying molecular mechanisms involve complex microbiota-immune-tumor interactions, which are incompletely understood. Using unique mouse models of different CRC stages, germ-free mouse technology, established in-vitro assays, and precious clinical CRC isolates, we will study oncogenic microbes and their disease driving mechanisms. We will build further on recent discoveries that genotoxic E.coli strains drive CRC development though epithelial binding mechanisms, and that also fungi, including Candida albicans can exacerbate CRC. We will closely examine the host-microbiota interactions which regulate virulence factors of these oncogenic microbes, including binding mechanisms and genotoxin production. In addition, we will study bacteria which promote response to immune checkpoint inhibition therapy in-vivo. Together, we present a pioneering in-vivo research project to unravel complex host-microbe interactions in CRC development and therapy.