HIV-associated gut dysbiosis drives oncogenesis through metabolic-immune crosstalk: mechanisms and therapeutic implications.
HIV-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis perpetuates mucosal barrier disruption and systemic inflammation despite antiretroviral therapy (ART), creating a tumor-permissive microenvironment.
APA
Meng Q, Xu L, et al. (2025). HIV-associated gut dysbiosis drives oncogenesis through metabolic-immune crosstalk: mechanisms and therapeutic implications.. Frontiers in oncology, 15, 1634388. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2025.1634388
MLA
Meng Q, et al.. "HIV-associated gut dysbiosis drives oncogenesis through metabolic-immune crosstalk: mechanisms and therapeutic implications.." Frontiers in oncology, vol. 15, 2025, pp. 1634388.
PMID
40919140
Abstract
HIV-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis perpetuates mucosal barrier disruption and systemic inflammation despite antiretroviral therapy (ART), creating a tumor-permissive microenvironment. This review synthesizes evidence linking HIV-associated microbial alterations to oncogenesis through three convergent metabolic axes: (1) butyrate deficiency impairing epithelial energy metabolism and anti-tumor immunity; (2) tryptophan metabolism dysregulation compromising gut barrier integrity via depletion and -mediated phenylethylamine overproduction; and (3) vitamin B biosynthesis defects disrupting DNA repair and Th1/Th2 balance. Comparative profiling across HIV-associated malignancies-non-Hodgkin lymphoma, cervical cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, and lung cancer-reveals conserved dysbiotic signatures: depletion of anti-inflammatory taxa (, ) and expansion of pro-inflammatory genera (, ). These alterations activate NF-κB/STAT3 signaling, fostering IL-6/TNF-α-driven chronic inflammation. Emerging interventions, including -derived metabolites and butyrate supplementation, demonstrate potential to enhance immunotherapy efficacy and reverse chemoresistance. However, causal microbiota-tumor relationships remain unproven, and key AIDS-defining cancers (Kaposi sarcoma, anal carcinoma) lack microbial association studies. Prioritizing longitudinal multi-omics analyses, organoid models, and LMIC-focused clinical trials may advance microbiota-directed strategies for HIV-associated cancer prevention and treatment.
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (3)
- Selective detection of inflammatory bowel disease in spectral CT imaging utilizing hyaluronic acid‑neodymium vanadate nanoparticles.
- Identification of prognostic genes related to T cell proliferation in papillary thyroid cancer based on single-cell RNA sequencing and bulk RNA sequencing data.
- Case Study of Ectopic Thyroid Adenoma With Papillary Carcinoma in the Right Carotid Sheath: Controversy Between Primary and Metastatic Thyroid Carcinoma.