Cancer Evolution and Metastasis Program, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Nat Immunol. 2024 Oct;25(10):1793-1808. doi: 10.1038/s41590-024-01960-4. Epub 2024 Sep 16.
Metastasis, the spread of cancer from a primary site to distant organs, is an important challenge in oncology. This Review explores the complexities of immune escape mechanisms used throughout the metastatic cascade to promote tumor cell dissemination and affect organotropism. Specifically, we focus on adaptive plasticity of disseminated epithelial tumor cells to understand how they undergo phenotypic transitions to survive microenvironmental conditions encountered during metastasis. The interaction of tumor cells and their microenvironment is analyzed, highlighting the local and systemic effects that innate and adaptive immune systems have in shaping an immunosuppressive milieu to foster aggressive metastatic tumors. Effectively managing metastatic disease demands a multipronged approach to target the parallel and sequential mechanisms that suppress anti-tumor immunity. This management necessitates a deep understanding of the complex interplay between tumor cells, their microenvironment and immune responses that we provide with this Review.
转移,即癌症从原发部位扩散到远处器官,是肿瘤学面临的一个重要挑战。这篇综述探讨了肿瘤转移过程中用于促进肿瘤细胞扩散和影响器官趋向性的免疫逃逸机制的复杂性。具体而言,我们专注于播散性上皮肿瘤细胞的适应性可塑性,以了解它们如何经历表型转变,从而在转移过程中存活下来。分析了肿瘤细胞与其微环境的相互作用,突出了固有和适应性免疫系统在塑造抑制抗肿瘤免疫的免疫抑制微环境方面的局部和全身效应,以促进侵袭性转移肿瘤的生长。有效地管理转移性疾病需要采用多管齐下的方法来靶向抑制抗肿瘤免疫的平行和顺序机制。这种管理需要深入了解肿瘤细胞、其微环境和免疫反应之间的复杂相互作用,我们通过这篇综述提供了这种理解。