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Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?

Cancer is a highly aggressive and devastating disease, and impediments to a cure arise not just from cancer itself. Targeted therapies are difficult to achieve since the majority of cancers are more intricate than ever imagined. Mainstream methodologies including chemotherapy and radiotherapy as rou...

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Autores principales: Chen, Fei, Qi, Xinyi, Qian, Min, Dai, Yue, Sun, Yu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Higher Education Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25185441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-014-0097-1
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author Chen, Fei
Qi, Xinyi
Qian, Min
Dai, Yue
Sun, Yu
author_facet Chen, Fei
Qi, Xinyi
Qian, Min
Dai, Yue
Sun, Yu
author_sort Chen, Fei
collection PubMed
description Cancer is a highly aggressive and devastating disease, and impediments to a cure arise not just from cancer itself. Targeted therapies are difficult to achieve since the majority of cancers are more intricate than ever imagined. Mainstream methodologies including chemotherapy and radiotherapy as routine clinical regimens frequently fail, eventually leading to pathologies that are refractory and incurable. One major cause is the gradual to rapid repopulation of surviving cancer cells during intervals of multiple-dose administration. Novel stress-responsive molecular pathways are increasingly unmasked and show promise as emerging targets for advanced strategies that aim at both de novo and acquired resistance. We highlight recent data reporting that treatments particularly those genotoxic can induce highly conserved damage responses in non-cancerous constituents of the tumor microenvironment (TMEN). Master regulators, including but not limited to NF-kB and C/EBP-β, are implicated and their signal cascades culminate in a robust, chronic and genome-wide secretory program, forming an activated TMEN that releases a myriad of soluble factors. The damage-elicited but essentially off target and cell non-autonomous secretory phenotype of host stroma causes adverse consequences, among which is acquired resistance of cancer cells. Harnessing signals arising from the TMEN, a pathophysiological niche frequently damaged by medical interventions, has the potential to promote overall efficacy and improve clinical outcomes provided that appropriate actions are ingeniously integrated into contemporary therapies. Thereby, anticancer regimens should be well tuned to establish an innovative clinical avenue, and such advancement will allow future oncological treatments to be more specific, accurate, thorough and personalized.
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spelling pubmed-42254632014-11-13 Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies? Chen, Fei Qi, Xinyi Qian, Min Dai, Yue Sun, Yu Protein Cell Review Cancer is a highly aggressive and devastating disease, and impediments to a cure arise not just from cancer itself. Targeted therapies are difficult to achieve since the majority of cancers are more intricate than ever imagined. Mainstream methodologies including chemotherapy and radiotherapy as routine clinical regimens frequently fail, eventually leading to pathologies that are refractory and incurable. One major cause is the gradual to rapid repopulation of surviving cancer cells during intervals of multiple-dose administration. Novel stress-responsive molecular pathways are increasingly unmasked and show promise as emerging targets for advanced strategies that aim at both de novo and acquired resistance. We highlight recent data reporting that treatments particularly those genotoxic can induce highly conserved damage responses in non-cancerous constituents of the tumor microenvironment (TMEN). Master regulators, including but not limited to NF-kB and C/EBP-β, are implicated and their signal cascades culminate in a robust, chronic and genome-wide secretory program, forming an activated TMEN that releases a myriad of soluble factors. The damage-elicited but essentially off target and cell non-autonomous secretory phenotype of host stroma causes adverse consequences, among which is acquired resistance of cancer cells. Harnessing signals arising from the TMEN, a pathophysiological niche frequently damaged by medical interventions, has the potential to promote overall efficacy and improve clinical outcomes provided that appropriate actions are ingeniously integrated into contemporary therapies. Thereby, anticancer regimens should be well tuned to establish an innovative clinical avenue, and such advancement will allow future oncological treatments to be more specific, accurate, thorough and personalized. Higher Education Press 2014-09-05 2014-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4225463/ /pubmed/25185441 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-014-0097-1 Text en © The Author(s) 2014 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Review
Chen, Fei
Qi, Xinyi
Qian, Min
Dai, Yue
Sun, Yu
Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title_full Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title_fullStr Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title_full_unstemmed Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title_short Tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
title_sort tackling the tumor microenvironment: what challenge does it pose to anticancer therapies?
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25185441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-014-0097-1
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