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result(s) for
"Cancer associated fibroblasts"
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Fibroblasts in the Tumor Microenvironment: Shield or Spear?
by
Moyano-Galceran, Lidia
,
Arsenian-Henriksson, Marie
,
Alkasalias, Twana
in
Animals
,
Cancer
,
Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts - cytology
2018
Tumorigenesis is a complex process involving dynamic interactions between malignant cells and their surrounding stroma, including both the cellular and acellular components. Within the stroma, fibroblasts represent not only a predominant cell type, but also a major source of the acellular tissue microenvironment comprising the extracellular matrix (ECM) and soluble factors. Normal fibroblasts can exert diverse suppressive functions against cancer initiating and metastatic cells via direct cell-cell contact, paracrine signaling by soluble factors, and ECM integrity. The loss of such suppressive functions is an inherent step in tumor progression. A tumor cell-induced switch of normal fibroblasts into cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), in turn, triggers a range of pro-tumorigenic signals accompanied by distraction of the normal tissue architecture, thus creating an optimal niche for cancer cells to grow extensively. To further support tumor progression and metastasis, CAFs secrete factors such as ECM remodeling enzymes that further modify the tumor microenvironment in combination with the altered adhesive forces and cell-cell interactions. These paradoxical tumor suppressive and promoting actions of fibroblasts are the focus of this review, highlighting the heterogenic molecular properties of both normal and cancer-associated fibroblasts, as well as their main mechanisms of action, including the emerging impact on immunomodulation and different therapy responses.
Journal Article
Targeting Cancer‐Associated Fibroblasts: Eliminate or Reprogram?
2025
Cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are key components of the tumor microenvironment (TME). Given their various roles in tumor progression and treatment resistance, CAFs are promising therapeutic targets in cancer. The elimination of tumor‐promoting CAFs has been investigated in various animal models to determine whether it effectively suppresses tumor growth. Based on recent evidence, several simple strategies have been proposed to eliminate tumor‐promoting CAFs and attenuate these features. In addition, attention has focused on the critical role that CAFs play in the immunosuppressive TME. Therefore, the functional reprogramming of CAFs in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors has also been investigated as a possible therapeutic approach. However, although potential targets in CAFs have been widely characterized, the plasticity and heterogeneity of CAFs complicate the understanding of their properties and present difficulties for clinical application. Moreover, the identification of tumor‐suppressive CAFs highlights the necessity for the development of therapeutic approaches that can distinguish and switch between tumor‐promoting and tumor‐suppressive CAFs in an appropriate manner. In this review, we introduce the origins and diversity of CAFs, their role in cancer, and current therapeutic strategies aimed at targeting CAFs, including ongoing clinical evaluations. CAFs have been proposed as key tumor‐promoting players and promising therapeutic targets for cancer. This review summarizes the origins and diversity of CAFs, their role in cancer, and current therapeutic strategies aimed at targeting CAFs, including ongoing clinical evaluations.
Journal Article
CAF secreted miR-522 suppresses ferroptosis and promotes acquired chemo-resistance in gastric cancer
by
Zhang, Le
,
Ge, Shaohua
,
Wang, Hailong
in
Animals
,
Antineoplastic Agents - pharmacology
,
Apoptosis
2020
Background
Ferroptosis is a novel mode of non-apoptotic cell death induced by build-up of toxic lipid peroxides (lipid-ROS) in an iron dependent manner. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) support tumor progression and drug resistance by secreting various bioactive substances, including exosomes. Yet, the role of CAFs in regulating lipid metabolism as well as ferroptosis of cancer cells is still unexplored and remains enigmatic.
Methods
Ferroptosis-related genes in gastric cancer (GC) were screened by using mass spectrum; exosomes were isolated by ultra-centrifugation and CAF secreted miRNAs were determined by RT-qPCR. Erastin was used to induce ferroptosis, and ferroptosis levels were evaluated by measuring lipid-ROS, cell viability and mitochondrial membrane potential.
Results
Here, we provide clinical evidence to show that arachidonate lipoxygenase 15 (ALOX15) is closely related with lipid-ROS production in gastric cancer, and that exosome-miR-522 serves as a potential inhibitor of ALOX15. By using primary stromal cells and cancer cells, we prove that exosome-miR-522 is mainly derived from CAFs in tumor microenvironment. Moreover, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNPA1) was found to mediate miR-522 packing into exosomes, and ubiquitin-specific protease 7 (USP7) stabilizes hnRNPA1 through de-ubiquitination. Importantly, cisplatin and paclitaxel promote miR-522 secretion from CAFs by activating USP7/hnRNPA1 axis, leading to ALOX15 suppression and decreased lipid-ROS accumulation in cancer cells, and ultimately result in decreased chemo-sensitivity.
Conclusions
The present study demonstrates that CAFs secrete exosomal miR-522 to inhibit ferroptosis in cancer cells by targeting ALOX15 and blocking lipid-ROS accumulation. The intercellular pathway, comprising USP7, hnRNPA1, exo-miR-522 and ALOX15, reveals new mechanism of acquired chemo-resistance in GC.
Graphical abstract
Journal Article
Modulation of the tumor microenvironment and mechanism of immunotherapy-based drug resistance in breast cancer
by
Das, Sumit
,
Butti, Ramesh
,
Gosavi, Suresh W.
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Breast cancer
2024
Breast cancer, the most frequent female malignancy, is often curable when detected at an early stage. The treatment of metastatic breast cancer is more challenging and may be unresponsive to conventional therapy. Immunotherapy is crucial for treating metastatic breast cancer, but its resistance is a major limitation. The tumor microenvironment (TME) is vital in modulating the immunotherapy response. Various tumor microenvironmental components, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), are involved in TME modulation to cause immunotherapy resistance. This review highlights the role of stromal cells in modulating the breast tumor microenvironment, including the involvement of CAF-TAM interaction, alteration of tumor metabolism leading to immunotherapy failure, and other latest strategies, including high throughput genomic screening, single-cell and spatial omics techniques for identifying tumor immune genes regulating immunotherapy response. This review emphasizes the therapeutic approach to overcome breast cancer immune resistance through CAF reprogramming, modulation of TAM polarization, tumor metabolism, and genomic alterations.
Journal Article
Cancer‐associated fibroblasts that restrain cancer progression: Hypotheses and perspectives
2020
The roles of cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAF) in the progression of various types of cancers are well established. CAF promote cancer progression through pleiotropic mechanisms, including the secretion of soluble factors and extracellular matrix, physical interactions with cancer cells, and the regulation of angiogenesis, immunity and metabolism. Their contribution to therapeutic resistance is also well appreciated. Therefore, CAF have been considered as a therapeutic target in cancer. However, recent studies in autochthonous pancreatic cancer models suggest that specific subset(s) of CAF exhibit cancer‐restraining roles, indicating that CAF are functionally and molecularly heterogeneous, which is supported by recent single‐cell transcriptome analyses. While cancer‐promoting CAF (pCAF) have been extensively studied, the nature and specific marker(s) of cancer‐restraining CAF (rCAF) have remained uncharacterized. Interestingly, a recent study provided insight into the nature of rCAF and suggested that they may share molecular properties with pancreatic stellate cells (PSC) and mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSC). Complicating this finding is that PSC and MSC have been shown to promote the formation of a tumor‐permissive and tumor‐promoting environment in xenograft tumor models. However, these cells undergo significant transcriptional and epigenetic changes during ex vivo culture, which confounds the interpretation of experimental results based on the use of cultured cells. In this short review, we describe recent studies and hypotheses on the identity of rCAF and discuss their analogy to fibroblasts that suppress fibrosis in fibrotic diseases. Finally, we discuss how these findings can be exploited to develop novel anticancer therapies in the future. Meflin marks CAF that first emerge around metaplastic or transformed cells, which behave as rCAF and later give rise to α‐SMA+ CAF with low Meflin expression, in pancreatic cancer. This results in CAF heterogeneity in an advanced stage of pancreatic cancer.
Journal Article
Biological heterogeneity and versatility of cancer-associated fibroblasts in the tumor microenvironment
2019
Increasing lines of evidence show that the malignant behavior of cancer is not exclusively attributable to cancer cells but also radically influenced by cancerous stroma activity and controlled through various mechanisms by the microenvironment. In addition to structural components, such as the extracellular matrix, stromal cells, such as macrophages, endothelial cells, and specifically cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), have attracted substantial attention over recent decades. CAFs provide routes for aggressive carcinomas and contribute to invasion and metastasis through the biochemical alteration and regulation of cancer-related pathways. However, another facet of CAFs that has been neglected by numerous studies is that CAFs might serve as a negative regulator of cancer progression under certain circumstances. The various origins of CAFs, the diverse tissues in which they reside and their interactions with different cancer cells appear to be responsible for this inconsistency. This review summarizes the latest knowledge regarding CAF heterogeneity and offers a novel perspective and a beneficial approach for obtaining an improved understanding of CAFs.
Journal Article
A framework for advancing our understanding of cancer-associated fibroblasts
2020
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are a key component of the tumour microenvironment with diverse functions, including matrix deposition and remodelling, extensive reciprocal signalling interactions with cancer cells and crosstalk with infiltrating leukocytes. As such, they are a potential target for optimizing therapeutic strategies against cancer. However, many challenges are present in ongoing attempts to modulate CAFs for therapeutic benefit. These include limitations in our understanding of the origin of CAFs and heterogeneity in CAF function, with it being desirable to retain some antitumorigenic functions. On the basis of a meeting of experts in the field of CAF biology, we summarize in this Consensus Statement our current knowledge and present a framework for advancing our understanding of this critical cell type within the tumour microenvironment.This Consensus Statement highlights the importance of cancer-associated fibroblasts in cancer biology and progression, and issues a call to action for all cancer researchers to standardize assays and report metadata in studies of cancer-associated fibroblasts to advance our understanding of this important cell type in the tumour microenvironment.
Journal Article
Heterogeneity of cancer‐associated fibroblasts: Opportunities for precision medicine
by
Pietras, Kristian
,
Kanzaki, Ryu
in
Antineoplastic Agents - pharmacology
,
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
,
Bone marrow
2020
Despite marked development in cancer therapies during recent decades, the prognosis for advanced cancer remains poor. The conventional tumor–cell‐centric view of cancer can only explain part of cancer progression, and thus a thorough understanding of the tumor microenvironment (TME) is crucial. Among cells within the TME, cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are attracting attention as a target for cancer therapy. However, CAFs present a heterogeneous population of cells and more detailed classification of CAFs and investigation of functions of each subset is needed to develop novel CAF‐targeted therapies. In this context, application of newly developed approaches to single‐cell analysis has already made an impact on our understanding of the heterogeneity of CAFs. Here, we review the recent literature on CAF heterogeneity and function, and discuss the possibility of novel therapies targeting CAF subsets. The conventional tumor–cell‐centric view of cancer can only explain a part of cancer progression, thus understanding of the tumor microenvironment (TME) is crucial. Among cells within the TME, cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are attracting attention as a target for cancer therapy. Here, we review the recent literature that has improved our understanding of heterogeneity in CAFs and function of each subset, and discuss the possibility of novel therapies targeting CAF subsets.
Journal Article
Targeting interleukin-6 as a strategy to overcome stroma-induced resistance to chemotherapy in gastric cancer
2019
Background
Although the tumor stroma in solid tumors like gastric cancer (GC) plays a crucial role in chemo-resistance, specific targets to inhibit the interaction between the stromal and cancer cells have not yet been utilized in clinical practice. The present study aims to determine whether cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), a major component of the tumor stroma, confer chemotherapeutic resistance to GC cells, and to discover potential targets to improve chemo-response in GC.
Methods
To identify CAF-specific proteins and signal transduction pathways affecting chemo-resistance in GC cells, secretome and transcriptome analyses were performed. We evaluated the inhibiting effect of CAF-specific protein in in vivo and in vitro models and investigated the expression of CAF-specific protein in human GC tissues.
Results
Secretome and transcriptome data revealed that interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a CAF-specific secretory protein that protects GC cells via paracrine signaling. Furthermore, CAF-induced activation of the Janus kinase 1-signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 signal transduction pathway confers chemo-resistance in GC cells. CAF-mediated inhibition of chemotherapy-induced apoptosis was abrogated by the anti-IL-6 receptor monoclonal antibody tocilizumab in various experimental models. Clinical data revealed that IL-6 was prominently expressed in the stromal portion of GC tissues, and IL-6 upregulation in GC tissues was correlated with poor responsiveness to chemotherapy.
Conclusions
Our data provide plausible evidence for crosstalk between GC cells and CAFs, wherein IL-6 is a key contributor to chemoresistance. These findings suggest the potential therapeutic application of IL-6 inhibitors to enhance the responsiveness to chemotherapy in GC.
Journal Article
CAF-induced physical constraints controlling T cell state and localization in solid tumours
by
Carradori, Giulia
,
Scherz-Shouval, Ruth
,
Arpinati, Ludovica
in
631/67/327
,
631/67/580
,
Animals
2024
Solid tumours comprise cancer cells that engage in continuous interactions with non-malignant cells and with acellular components, forming the tumour microenvironment (TME). The TME has crucial and diverse roles in tumour progression and metastasis, and substantial efforts have been dedicated into understanding the functions of different cell types within the TME. These efforts highlighted the importance of non-cell-autonomous signalling in cancer, mediating interactions between the cancer cells, the immune microenvironment and the non-immune stroma. Much of this non-cell-autonomous signalling is mediated through acellular components of the TME, known as the extracellular matrix (ECM), and controlled by the cells that secrete and remodel the ECM — the cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). In this Review, we delve into the complex crosstalk among cancer cells, CAFs and immune cells, highlighting the effects of CAF-induced ECM remodelling on T cell functions and offering insights into the potential of targeting ECM components to improve cancer therapies.
In this Review, Arpinati et al. summarize how the extracellular matrix, produced primarily by cancer-associated fibroblasts, impacts tumour progression, metastasis and therapy response through modulation of T cell-mediated antitumour immunity and propose routes to target these mechanisms therapeutically.
Journal Article