Shu Liu, Ying Ying Shen, Li Yang Yin, Jianghua Liu, Xuyu Zu
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Lipid Metabolic Regulatory Crosstalk Between Cancer Cells and Tumor-Associated Macrophages.
In the tumor microenvironment, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are one of the most abundant cell populations, playing key roles in tumorigenesis, chemoresistance, immune evasion, and metastasis. There is an important interaction between TAMs and cancer cells: on the one hand, tumors control the function of infiltrating macrophages, contributing to reprogramming of TAMs, and on the other hand, TAMs affect the growth of cancer cells. This review focuses on lipid metabolism changes in the complex relationship between cancer cells and TAMs. We discuss how lipid metabolism in cancer cells affects macrophage phenotypic and metabolic changes and, subsequently, how altered lipid metabolism of TAMs influences tumor progression. Identifying the metabolic changes that influence the complex interaction between tumor cells and TAMs is also an important step in exploring new therapeutic approaches that target metabolic reprogramming of immune cells to enhance their tumoricidal potential and bypass therapy resistance. Our work may provide new targets for antitumor therapies.
期刊介绍:
DNA and Cell Biology delivers authoritative, peer-reviewed research on all aspects of molecular and cellular biology, with a unique focus on combining mechanistic and clinical studies to drive the field forward.
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Gene Structure, Function, and Regulation
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Molecular mechanisms of cell activation
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Molecular pathogenesis
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Cellular Organelles
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Protein Biosynthesis and Degradation
Regulation of protein synthesis
Post-translational modifications
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Cell-Autonomous Inflammation and Host Cell Response to Infection
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Evasive pathways of pathogens.