Literature DB >> 29239591

Macrophages and cancer.

Marko Salmi.   

Abstract

Macrophages are an important type of white blood cells in the dialogue between inflammatory response and cancer. Macrophages can maintain a chronic inflammatory state that predisposes to the development of cancer. In the tumor, macrophages phagocytose and kill cancer cells directly and promote the generation of antitumoral cytotoxic lymphocyte response. Cancer cells, however, often modulate the functions of macrophages in several ways to promote tumor progression. Such protumoral macrophages increase neovascularization, produce molecules promoting the growth and dissemination of cancer cells, and suppress antitumoral immune responses. Hence, abundant macrophage infiltration correlates with poor prognosis in most types of cancer. Many cancer treatments also affect the antitumoral properties of macrophages. New drugs are developed to reduce the accumulation of macrophages into malignant tissue and to re-educate pro-tumoral macrophages to anti-tumoral macrophages and some of these drugs have already entered clinical trials.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29239591

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Duodecim        ISSN: 0012-7183


  6 in total

1.  MicroRNA-22 represses glioma development via activation of macrophage-mediated innate and adaptive immune responses.

Authors:  Jiajie Tu; Yilong Fang; Dafei Han; Xuewen Tan; Zhen Xu; Haifeng Jiang; Xinming Wang; Wenming Hong; Wei Wei
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2022-03-12       Impact factor: 9.867

2.  Prognostic significance of the infiltration of CD163+ macrophages combined with CD66b+ neutrophils in gastric cancer.

Authors:  Xiaopei Huang; Yamin Pan; Jun Ma; Zhengchun Kang; Xiaowen Xu; Yan Zhu; Jikuai Chen; Wei Zhang; Wenjun Chang; Jiangbo Zhu
Journal:  Cancer Med       Date:  2018-03-24       Impact factor: 4.452

3.  Special AT-rich Sequence Binding-Protein 1 (SATB1) Correlates with Immune Infiltration in Breast, Head and Neck, and Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Hua Ge; Yan Yan; Maozhao Yan; Lingfei Guo; Kun Mao
Journal:  Med Sci Monit       Date:  2020-06-20

4.  SIRT4 silencing in tumor-associated macrophages promotes HCC development via PPARδ signalling-mediated alternative activation of macrophages.

Authors:  Zhi Li; He Li; Zhi-Bo Zhao; Wei Zhu; Pan-Pan Feng; Xi-Wen Zhu; Jian-Ping Gong
Journal:  J Exp Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2019-11-19

5.  Immune Infiltration Analysis with the CIBERSORT Method in Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Meng Guan; Yan Jiao; Lili Zhou
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2022-03-18       Impact factor: 3.434

Review 6.  Bone Marrow Stromal Cells-Induced Drug Resistance in Multiple Myeloma.

Authors:  Roberto Ria; Angelo Vacca
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-01-17       Impact factor: 5.923

  6 in total

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