Endocannabinoid Research Group, Reproductive Sciences Section, Department of Cancer Studies and Molecular Medicine, University of Leicester, Leicester LE2 7LX, UK.
Endocannabinoid Research Group, Reproductive Sciences Section, Department of Cancer Studies and Molecular Medicine, University of Leicester, Leicester LE2 7LX, UK Biosciences, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Clifton Campus, Nottingham NG1 4BU, UK
Hum Reprod Update. 2015 Jul-Aug;21(4):517-35. doi: 10.1093/humupd/dmv022. Epub 2015 May 9.
The 'endocannabinoid system' (ECS), comprising endogenous ligands (endocannabinoids) and their regulating enzymes, together with the cannabinoid receptors, has attracted a great deal of attention because it affects not only all facets of human reproduction, from gametogenesis through to parturition and beyond, but also targets key mechanisms affecting some hallmarks of cancer. Recent evidence showing that cannabinoid receptors play a very important role in the development of malignancies outside of the reproductive organs suggests a similar role for the ECS in the establishment or continued development of gynaecological malignancy.
Primary papers and review articles, and primary sources within these papers, up to December 2014, on the evolving role of the ECS in cancer, with a special focus on gynaecological cancers, were obtained by Medline and PubMed searches using the search terms: 'cancer', 'cannabinoid', 'endocannabinoid', 'gynaecology' and 'malignancy'. Non-English manuscripts were excluded.
More than 2100 sources were obtained from which only 112 were specifically important to the topic. Analysis of those articles supports a role of the ECS in gynaecological cancers but leaves many gaps in our knowledge that need to be filled. How some of the relevant receptors are activated and cause changes in cell phenotypes that progress to malignancy remains undiscovered and an area for future research. Increasing evidence suggests that malignant transformation within the female genital tract could be accompanied by deregulation of components of the ECS, acting through rather complex cannabinoid receptor-dependent and receptor-independent mechanisms.
The paucity of studies in this area suggests that research using animal models is needed to evaluate endocannabinoid signalling in cancer networks. Future randomized clinical studies should reveal whether endocannabinoids or their derivatives prove to be useful therapeutic targets for gynaecological and other cancers.
内源性大麻素系统(ECS)由内源性配体(内源性大麻素)及其调节酶以及大麻素受体组成,不仅影响人类生殖的各个方面,从配子发生到分娩及以后,而且还影响影响某些癌症特征的关键机制,因此受到了极大的关注。最近的证据表明,大麻素受体在生殖器官以外的恶性肿瘤的发展中起着非常重要的作用,这表明 ECS 在妇科恶性肿瘤的建立或持续发展中也起着类似的作用。
通过 Medline 和 PubMed 搜索,使用“癌症”、“大麻素”、“内源性大麻素”、“妇科”和“恶性肿瘤”等术语,获取截至 2014 年 12 月关于 ECS 在癌症中不断发展的作用的主要论文和综述文章,以及这些论文中的主要来源,特别关注妇科癌症。排除非英语文献。
从超过 2100 个来源中仅获得了 112 个对该主题特别重要的来源。对这些文章的分析支持 ECS 在妇科癌症中的作用,但在我们的知识中仍存在许多空白,需要填补。一些相关受体如何被激活并导致导致恶性转化的细胞表型变化仍未被发现,这是未来研究的一个领域。越来越多的证据表明,女性生殖道的恶性转化可能伴随着 ECS 成分的失调,通过相当复杂的大麻素受体依赖和受体非依赖机制发挥作用。
该领域研究的缺乏表明,需要使用动物模型来评估癌症网络中内源性大麻素信号。未来的随机临床试验应揭示内源性大麻素或其衍生物是否可作为妇科和其他癌症的有用治疗靶点。