Observational study suggests colibactin mutations are enriched in rectum regardless of polyp status
This observational study utilized whole-genome sequencing of colon crypts obtained from colonoscopy biopsies across six standardized regions. The cohort included 11 donors without polyps and 10 with polyps, totaling 125 individual colon crypts analyzed. The investigation focused on the enrichment of colibactin-associated mutational signature 'ID18' and specific T>A,C,G mutations originating from pks+ Escherichia coli.
The results demonstrated significantly enriched T>A,C,G mutations in the rectum of donors with and without polyps, with adjusted p-values < 0.01. Furthermore, consistent enrichment of the colibactin-associated mutational signature 'ID18' was observed in the rectum within both normal colon crypts and CRC tumors. However, no significant difference in colibactin-specific single nucleotide variant or insertion-deletion burden was found across the three clinical groups comprising no polyp, polyp, and CRC.
The authors note that the reasons for the rise of early-onset colorectal cancer remain unknown and the etiology of region-specific disease, such as early-onset CRC's enrichment in the distal colon, is unclear. The study argues against a causal or prognostic role for colibactin in colorectal cancer. Understanding regional mutagenesis may identify risk factors for early-onset CRC and colorectal cancer more broadly, though the proposed association reflects anatomic specificity rather than cancer-specific clinical relevance.