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p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance

Chemoresistance persists as a significant, unresolved clinical challenge in many cancer types. The tumor microenvironment, in which cancer cells reside and interact with non-cancer cells and tissue structures, has a known role in promoting every aspect of tumor progression, including chemoresistance...

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Autores principales: Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e, Faletti, Anderson, Veríssimo, Carla Pires, Stelling, Mariana Paranhos, Borges, Helena Lobo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8877489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35207121
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12020202
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author Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e
Faletti, Anderson
Veríssimo, Carla Pires
Stelling, Mariana Paranhos
Borges, Helena Lobo
author_facet Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e
Faletti, Anderson
Veríssimo, Carla Pires
Stelling, Mariana Paranhos
Borges, Helena Lobo
author_sort Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e
collection PubMed
description Chemoresistance persists as a significant, unresolved clinical challenge in many cancer types. The tumor microenvironment, in which cancer cells reside and interact with non-cancer cells and tissue structures, has a known role in promoting every aspect of tumor progression, including chemoresistance. However, the molecular determinants of microenvironment-driven chemoresistance are mainly unknown. In this review, we propose that the TP53 tumor suppressor, found mutant in over half of human cancers, is a crucial regulator of cancer cell-microenvironment crosstalk and a prime candidate for the investigation of microenvironment-specific modulators of chemoresistance. Wild-type p53 controls the secretion of factors that inhibit the tumor microenvironment, whereas altered secretion or mutant p53 interfere with p53 function to promote chemoresistance. We highlight resistance mechanisms promoted by mutant p53 and enforced by the microenvironment, such as extracellular matrix remodeling and adaptation to hypoxia. Alterations of wild-type p53 extracellular function may create a cascade of spatial amplification loops in the tumor tissue that can influence cellular behavior far from the initial oncogenic mutation. We discuss the concept of chemoresistance as a multicellular/tissue-level process rather than intrinsically cellular. Targeting p53-dependent crosstalk mechanisms between cancer cells and components of the tumor environment might disrupt the waves of chemoresistance that spread across the tumor tissue, increasing the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents.
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spelling pubmed-88774892022-02-26 p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e Faletti, Anderson Veríssimo, Carla Pires Stelling, Mariana Paranhos Borges, Helena Lobo Membranes (Basel) Review Chemoresistance persists as a significant, unresolved clinical challenge in many cancer types. The tumor microenvironment, in which cancer cells reside and interact with non-cancer cells and tissue structures, has a known role in promoting every aspect of tumor progression, including chemoresistance. However, the molecular determinants of microenvironment-driven chemoresistance are mainly unknown. In this review, we propose that the TP53 tumor suppressor, found mutant in over half of human cancers, is a crucial regulator of cancer cell-microenvironment crosstalk and a prime candidate for the investigation of microenvironment-specific modulators of chemoresistance. Wild-type p53 controls the secretion of factors that inhibit the tumor microenvironment, whereas altered secretion or mutant p53 interfere with p53 function to promote chemoresistance. We highlight resistance mechanisms promoted by mutant p53 and enforced by the microenvironment, such as extracellular matrix remodeling and adaptation to hypoxia. Alterations of wild-type p53 extracellular function may create a cascade of spatial amplification loops in the tumor tissue that can influence cellular behavior far from the initial oncogenic mutation. We discuss the concept of chemoresistance as a multicellular/tissue-level process rather than intrinsically cellular. Targeting p53-dependent crosstalk mechanisms between cancer cells and components of the tumor environment might disrupt the waves of chemoresistance that spread across the tumor tissue, increasing the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents. MDPI 2022-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8877489/ /pubmed/35207121 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12020202 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Souza, Leonel Cardozo de Menezes e
Faletti, Anderson
Veríssimo, Carla Pires
Stelling, Mariana Paranhos
Borges, Helena Lobo
p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title_full p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title_fullStr p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title_full_unstemmed p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title_short p53 Signaling on Microenvironment and Its Contribution to Tissue Chemoresistance
title_sort p53 signaling on microenvironment and its contribution to tissue chemoresistance
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8877489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35207121
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12020202
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