Pathogens (Oct 2021)

Bacteria–Cancer Interface: Awaiting the Perfect Storm

  • Jonathan Pommer Hansen,
  • Waled Mohammed Ali,
  • Rajeeve Sivadasan,
  • Karthika Rajeeve

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10101321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 1321

Abstract

Read online

Epidemiological evidence reveal a very close association of malignancies with chronic inflammation as a result of persistent bacterial infection. Recently, more studies have provided experimental evidence for an etiological role of bacterial factors disposing infected tissue towards carcinoma. When healthy cells accumulate genomic insults resulting in DNA damage, they may sustain proliferative signalling, resist apoptotic signals, evade growth suppressors, enable replicative immortality, and induce angiogenesis, thus boosting active invasion and metastasis. Moreover, these cells must be able to deregulate cellular energetics and have the ability to evade immune destruction. How bacterial infection leads to mutations and enriches a tumour-promoting inflammatory response or micro-environment is still not clear. In this review we showcase well-studied bacteria and their virulence factors that are tightly associated with carcinoma and the various mechanisms and pathways that could have carcinogenic properties.

Keywords