Microenvironmental regulation of tumor progression and metastasis
Cancer cells can alter and build a permissive microenvironment that supports the malignant behavior of a growing primary tumor and developing metastases. But the role of the players in the stroma is rather complex, and their functions are intertwined, requiring a strategy to normalize the microenvir...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature medicine 2013-11, Vol.19 (11), p.1423-1437 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cancer cells can alter and build a permissive microenvironment that supports the malignant behavior of a growing primary tumor and developing metastases. But the role of the players in the stroma is rather complex, and their functions are intertwined, requiring a strategy to normalize the microenvironment to halt cancer progression. Re-education of stromal cells that interact with tumor cells may be a promising therapeutic avenue to exploit a genetically stable part of the tumor.
Cancers develop in complex tissue environments, which they depend on for sustained growth, invasion and metastasis. Unlike tumor cells, stromal cell types within the tumor microenvironment (TME) are genetically stable and thus represent an attractive therapeutic target with reduced risk of resistance and tumor recurrence. However, specifically disrupting the pro-tumorigenic TME is a challenging undertaking, as the TME has diverse capacities to induce both beneficial and adverse consequences for tumorigenesis. Furthermore, many studies have shown that the microenvironment is capable of normalizing tumor cells, suggesting that re-education of stromal cells, rather than targeted ablation
per se
, may be an effective strategy for treating cancer. Here we discuss the paradoxical roles of the TME during specific stages of cancer progression and metastasis, as well as recent therapeutic attempts to re-educate stromal cells within the TME to have anti-tumorigenic effects. |
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ISSN: | 1078-8956 1546-170X |
DOI: | 10.1038/nm.3394 |