Suppr超能文献

止血与癌症的遗传途径。

Genetic pathways linking hemostasis and cancer.

机构信息

Montreal Children's Hospital, McGill University, QC, Canada.

出版信息

Thromb Res. 2012 Apr;129 Suppl 1:S22-9. doi: 10.1016/S0049-3848(12)70012-9.

Abstract

Oncogenic events impact interactions of cancer cells with their surroundings. Amongst the most consequential, in this regard, is the influence on angiogenesis, inflammation and hemostasis. Indeed, mutant oncogenes (EGFR, HER2, RAS, MET, PML-RARα) are known to alter the expression of angiogenic and pro-inflammatory factors, as well as change the cancer cell coagulome, including the levels of tissue factor (TF) and other mediators (PAI-1, COX2). Accompanying losses of tumour suppressor genes (PTEN, p53), and changes in microRNA (miR-19b, miR-520) facilitate these effects. Transforming genes may also trigger ectopic production of coagulation factors (e.g. FVII) by cancer cells and their release and properties of procoagulant microparticles (MPs). By deregulating protease activated receptors (PAR1/2) oncogenes may also change tumour cell responses to coagulation factor signalling. These changes act in concert with microenvironmental factors (hypoxia), stress responses (therapy) and differentiation programs, including epithelial-to-mesechymal transitions (EMT) and through tumour initiating cell (TIC) compartment. In so doing, the coagulation system influences early (initiation, angiogenesis), intermediate (growth, invasion) and late stages (metastasis, relapse) of cancer progression. In fact, TF may act as a molecular switch that controls the transition between dormant, latent and progressive/metastatic disease. TIC-like cells may play a role in these effects, as they express TF and PAR-1/2, and respond to stimulation with their agonists. As major human malignancies (e.g. glioblastoma) are increasingly recognized to consist of a spectrum of molecularly distinct disease subtypes driven by specific genetic pathways, so too may their patterns of interaction differ with the coagulation system. A better understanding of these linkages may be a source of new diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic opportunities.

摘要

致癌事件会影响癌细胞与其周围环境的相互作用。在这方面,最重要的是对血管生成、炎症和止血的影响。事实上,突变致癌基因(EGFR、HER2、RAS、MET、PML-RARα)已知会改变血管生成和促炎因子的表达,并改变癌细胞的凝血组,包括组织因子(TF)和其他介质(PAI-1、COX2)的水平。伴随肿瘤抑制基因(PTEN、p53)的丢失以及 microRNA(miR-19b、miR-520)的改变,促进了这些效应。转化基因也可能触发癌细胞异位产生凝血因子(如 FVII)及其释放和促凝微粒(MPs)的特性。通过调节蛋白酶激活受体(PAR1/2),致癌基因也可能改变肿瘤细胞对凝血因子信号的反应。这些变化与微环境因素(缺氧)、应激反应(治疗)和分化程序(包括上皮-间充质转化(EMT)和肿瘤起始细胞(TIC)区室)协同作用。通过这种方式,凝血系统影响癌症进展的早期(启动、血管生成)、中期(生长、侵袭)和晚期(转移、复发)。事实上,TF 可能作为一个分子开关,控制着休眠、潜伏和进展/转移性疾病之间的转变。TIC 样细胞可能在这些效应中发挥作用,因为它们表达 TF 和 PAR-1/2,并对其激动剂的刺激作出反应。随着主要的人类恶性肿瘤(如胶质母细胞瘤)越来越被认为是由特定遗传途径驱动的一系列分子上不同的疾病亚型组成,它们与凝血系统的相互作用模式也可能不同。更好地理解这些联系可能是新的诊断、预后和治疗机会的来源。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验