Lewis Claire, Murdoch Craig
Tumor Targeting Group, Academic Unit of Pathology, Division of Genomic Medicine, Sir Henry Wellcome Laboratories for Medical Research, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield S10 2RX, UK.
Am J Pathol. 2005 Sep;167(3):627-35. doi: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)62038-X.
The presence of multiple areas of hypoxia (low oxygen tension) is a hallmark feature of human and experimental tumors. Monocytes are continually recruited into tumors, differentiate into tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), and then accumulate in these hypoxic areas. A number of recent studies have shown that macrophages respond to the levels of hypoxia found in tumors by up-regulating such transcription factors as hypoxia-inducible factors 1 and 2, which in turn activate a broad array of mitogenic, pro-invasive, pro-angiogenic, and pro-metastatic genes. This could explain why high numbers of TAMs correlate with poor prognosis in various forms of cancer. In this review, we assess the evidence for hypoxia activating a distinct, pro-tumor phenotype in macrophages and the possible effect of this on the growth, invasion, angiogenesis, and immune evasion of tumors. We also discuss current attempts to selectively target TAMs for destruction or to use them to deliver gene therapy specifically to hypoxic tumor sites.
多个缺氧(低氧张力)区域的存在是人类肿瘤和实验性肿瘤的一个标志性特征。单核细胞持续被招募到肿瘤中,分化为肿瘤相关巨噬细胞(TAM),然后在这些缺氧区域积聚。最近的一些研究表明,巨噬细胞通过上调缺氧诱导因子1和2等转录因子来响应肿瘤中发现的缺氧水平,这些转录因子反过来又激活一系列促有丝分裂、促侵袭、促血管生成和促转移基因。这可以解释为什么大量的TAM与各种癌症的不良预后相关。在这篇综述中,我们评估了缺氧激活巨噬细胞中一种独特的促肿瘤表型的证据以及这对肿瘤生长、侵袭、血管生成和免疫逃逸的可能影响。我们还讨论了目前选择性靶向TAM进行破坏或利用它们将基因治疗特异性递送至缺氧肿瘤部位的尝试。