Engineering bifidobacteria to deliver CRISPR antimicrobials targeting oncogenic in colorectal tumors.
(Fn) is increasingly recognized as a clinically meaningful driver in colorectal cancer (CRC), with recent multi-cohort sequencing studies detecting Fn in 35-45% of tumors and levels approaching 50% in
APA
Mehmood MS, Qamar T, et al. (2026). Engineering bifidobacteria to deliver CRISPR antimicrobials targeting oncogenic in colorectal tumors.. Annals of medicine and surgery (2012), 88(1), 40-41. https://doi.org/10.1097/MS9.0000000000004437
MLA
Mehmood MS, et al.. "Engineering bifidobacteria to deliver CRISPR antimicrobials targeting oncogenic in colorectal tumors.." Annals of medicine and surgery (2012), vol. 88, no. 1, 2026, pp. 40-41.
PMID
41496929
Abstract
(Fn) is increasingly recognized as a clinically meaningful driver in colorectal cancer (CRC), with recent multi-cohort sequencing studies detecting Fn in 35-45% of tumors and levels approaching 50% in stage II-III cases. Meta-analyses including more than 4000 patients consistently link Fn positivity to higher recurrence risk, shorter overall survival, and reduced response to fluoropyrimidine-based chemotherapy. The Fna C2 lineage shows the strongest association with malignancy, appearing in 29.2% of CRC samples compared with 4.8% of healthy controls ( < 5.6 × 10). Engineered strains, which naturally accumulate in tumor hypoxic zones at densities near 10 CFU/g, provide a platform for delivering CRISPR antimicrobials capable of reducing targeted microbes by 95-99% . These findings support efforts to eliminate oncogenic Fn within CRC tumors using precision microbial therapeutics.
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