Huntsman Cancer Institute, Population Sciences, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2017 Sep;10(9):494-506. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-16-0322.
Obesity and its associated metabolic dysregulation are established risk factors for many cancers. However, the biologic mechanisms underlying this relationship remain incompletely understood. Given the rising rates of both obesity and cancer worldwide, and the challenges for many people to lose excess adipose tissue, a systematic approach to identify potential molecular and metabolic targets is needed to develop effective mechanism-based strategies for the prevention and control of obesity-driven cancer. Epidemiologic, clinical, and preclinical data suggest that within the growth-promoting, proinflammatory microenvironment accompanying obesity, crosstalk between adipose tissue (comprised of adipocytes, macrophages and other cells) and cancer-prone cells may occur via obesity-associated hormones, cytokines, and other mediators that have been linked to increased cancer risk and/or progression. We report here a systematic review on the direct "crosstalk" between adipose tissue and carcinomas in humans. We identified 4,641 articles with = 20 human clinical studies, which are summarized as: (i) breast ( = 7); (ii) colorectal ( = 4); (iii) esophageal ( = 2); (iv) esophageal/colorectal ( = 1); (v) endometrial ( = 1); (vi) prostate ( = 4); and (vii) ear-nose-throat (ENT) cancer ( = 1). Findings from these clinical studies reinforce preclinical data and suggest organ-dependent crosstalk between adipose tissue and carcinomas via VEGF, IL6, TNFα, and other mechanisms. Moreover, visceral white adipose tissue plays a more central role, as it is more bioenergetically active and is associated with a more procancer secretome than subcutaneous adipose tissue. Efforts to eavesdrop and ultimately interfere with this cancer-enhancing crosstalk may lead to new targets and strategies for decreasing the burden of obesity-related cancers. .
肥胖及其相关的代谢失调是许多癌症的既定危险因素。然而,这种关系的生物学机制仍不完全清楚。鉴于全球肥胖和癌症发病率的上升,以及许多人难以减少多余的脂肪组织,需要采用系统的方法来确定潜在的分子和代谢靶点,以便制定有效的基于机制的策略,预防和控制肥胖相关的癌症。流行病学、临床和临床前数据表明,在肥胖伴随的促生长、促炎的微环境中,脂肪组织(由脂肪细胞、巨噬细胞和其他细胞组成)与易患癌症的细胞之间可能通过与癌症风险增加和/或进展相关的肥胖相关激素、细胞因子和其他介质发生相互作用。我们在这里报告了一项关于脂肪组织和人类癌之间直接“串扰”的系统综述。我们确定了 4641 篇文章,其中包含 20 项人类临床研究,总结如下:(i)乳腺癌(=7);(ii)结直肠癌(=4);(iii)食管癌(=2);(iv)食管/结直肠癌(=1);(v)子宫内膜癌(=1);(vi)前列腺癌(=4);和(vii)耳鼻喉(ENT)癌(=1)。这些临床研究的结果加强了临床前数据,并表明通过 VEGF、IL6、TNFα 和其他机制,脂肪组织和癌之间存在器官依赖性串扰。此外,内脏白色脂肪组织起着更核心的作用,因为它的生物能量活性更高,并且与更有利于癌症的分泌组有关,而不是皮下脂肪组织。努力监听并最终干扰这种促进癌症的串扰可能会为减少肥胖相关癌症的负担提供新的靶点和策略。