Does the Microbiome Help the Body Fight Cancer?

Research in mice and humans is beginning to establish a link between the composition of microbes in the gut and immune responses to tumor cells, but the mechanisms are not yet clear.

Written byCatherine Offord
| 4 min read

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A few years ago, biologist Ze’ev Ronai discovered that the mouse strain he’d been working with for the last decade was particularly resistant to melanoma. He’d been studying the mice—which lack a functional copy of the protein-regulating enzyme RNF5—with colleagues at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute in La Jolla, California, to learn more about the cellular stress response pathways of which RNF5 is a part. When, during research on those stress pathways’ involvement in cancer progression, the scientists inoculated the RNF5 knockouts with melanoma cells, they were surprised to find that tumors grew more slowly, and the mice showed heightened antitumor immune responses compared with wildtype animals.

Excited by the implications for immunotherapy research, Ronai’s group planned to demonstrate that the knockout mice’s immune cells, which are produced by bone marrow, were sufficient to elicit the same cancer-resistant phenotype when transferred into wildtype animals. But ...

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Meet the Author

  • After undergraduate research with spiders at the University of Oxford and graduate research with ants at Princeton University, Catherine left arthropods and academia to become a science journalist. She has worked in various guises at The Scientist since 2016. As Senior Editor, she wrote articles for the online and print publications, and edited the magazine’s Notebook, Careers, and Bio Business sections. She reports on subjects ranging from cellular and molecular biology to research misconduct and science policy. Find more of her work at her website.

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