| Literature DB >> 32326760 |
Sheng-Fan Wang1,2,3, Shiuan Chen4, Ling-Ming Tseng5,6, Hsin-Chen Lee3.
Abstract
IMPACT STATEMENT: Dysregulated mitochondria often occurred in cancers. Mitochondrial dysfunction might contribute to cancer progression. We reviewed several mitochondrial stresses in cancers. Mitochondrial stress responses might contribute to cancer progression. Several mitochondrion-derived molecules (ROS, Ca2+, oncometabolites, exported mtDNA, mitochondrial double-stranded RNA, humanin, and MOTS-c), integrated stress response, and mitochondrial unfolded protein response act as retrograde signaling pathways and might be critical in the development and progression of cancer. Targeting these mitochondrial stress responses may be an important strategy for cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Mitochondria; cancer progression; integrated stress response; mitochondrial stress response; retrograde signaling; unfolded protein response
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326760 PMCID: PMC7268930 DOI: 10.1177/1535370220920558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Biol Med (Maywood) ISSN: 1535-3699