1. Academic Validation
  2. Microbial metabolite trimethylamine-N-oxide facilitates colorectal inflammation-cancer transformation by blocking lysosomal degradation of Wnt signaling

Microbial metabolite trimethylamine-N-oxide facilitates colorectal inflammation-cancer transformation by blocking lysosomal degradation of Wnt signaling

  • Gut Microbes. 2025 Dec 31;17(1):2597626. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2025.2597626.
Kui Yang 1 Zhenni Liu 2 Huijun Wang 1 Zhengtao Xiao 2 Wei Zhao 1 Wenbin Gong 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of General Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, China.
  • 2 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Xi'an Jiaotong University Health Science Center, Xi'an, China.
Abstract

Chronic inflammation is closely related to the occurrence and development of many tumors, including colorectal Cancer (CRC), a typical inflammation-dependent Cancer. The gut bacteria and their metabolites, as signaling molecules or substrates of metabolic processes, have attracted increasing attention during the colorectal inflammation-cancer transformation process. However, how commensal microbiota-derived metabolites create a favorable internal environment for carcinogenesis through the chronic inflammatory response is not entirely understood. Here, we conducted multiomics analysis, including single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), microbiome and metabolome to explore the intricate cross-talk of host-microbe-metabolite. By employing colitis-associated CRC mice models, as well as patient-derived CRC organoids, we identified that trimethylamine n-oxide (TMAO), a metabolic product derived from the gut microbiota, was crucial for inflammation-mediated colorectal carcinogenesis by enhancing Wnt signaling. Further mechanistic studies revealed that TMAO interacted with heat shock protein family A member 8 (Hspa8, also known as Hsc70), a molecular chaperone that mediates Autophagy, to block the lysosomal degradation of the β-catenin protein, leading to an increase in the downstream targets cyclin D1 and c-Myc, thus contributing to colorectal carcinogenesis. Our results indicated that TMAO serves as a bridge to establish the connection between microbiota and colorectal carcinogenesis, playing a critical pathogenic role during CRC progression and therefore provides novel mechanistic insights into the intestinal inflammation in colorectal neoplasia progression.

Keywords

Gut microbiota; Wnt signaling; colorectal cancer; metabolite; trimethylamine-N-oxide.

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