How the ageing microenvironment influences tumour progression

被引:0
|
作者
Mitchell Fane
Ashani T. Weeraratna
机构
[1] The Wistar Institute,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
[2] Immunology,Department of Oncology
[3] Microenvironment and Metastasis Program,undefined
[4] Johns Hopkins School of Public Health,undefined
[5] Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,undefined
来源
Nature Reviews Cancer | 2020年 / 20卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Most cancers arise in individuals over the age of 60. As the world population is living longer and reaching older ages, cancer is becoming a substantial public health problem. It is estimated that, by 2050, more than 20% of the world’s population will be over the age of 60 — the economic, healthcare and financial burdens this may place on society are far from trivial. In this Review, we address the role of the ageing microenvironment in the promotion of tumour progression. Specifically, we discuss the cellular and molecular changes in non-cancerous cells during ageing, and how these may contribute towards a tumour permissive microenvironment; these changes encompass biophysical alterations in the extracellular matrix, changes in secreted factors and changes in the immune system. We also discuss the contribution of these changes to responses to cancer therapy as ageing predicts outcomes of therapy, including survival. Yet, in preclinical studies, the contribution of the aged microenvironment to therapy response is largely ignored, with most studies designed in 8-week-old mice rather than older mice that reflect an age appropriate to the disease being modelled. This may explain, in part, the failure of many successful preclinical therapies upon their translation to the clinic. Overall, the intention of this Review is to provide an overview of the interplay that occurs between ageing cell types in the microenvironment and cancer cells and how this is likely to impact tumour metastasis and therapy response.
引用
收藏
页码:89 / 106
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Glycoprotein asporin as a novel player in tumour microenvironment and cancer progression
    Simkova, Dana
    Kharaishvili, Gvantsa
    Slabakova, Eva
    Murray, Paul G.
    Bouchal, Jan
    BIOMEDICAL PAPERS-OLOMOUC, 2016, 160 (04): : 467 - 473
  • [22] TUMOUR MICROENVIRONMENT How the brain retains lymphoma cells
    Seton-Rogers, Sarah
    NATURE REVIEWS CANCER, 2019, 19 (11) : 609 - 609
  • [23] CAIX furthers tumour progression in the hypoxic tumour microenvironment of esophageal carcinoma and is a possible therapeutic target
    Drenckhan, Astrid
    Freytag, Morton
    Supuran, Claudiu T.
    Sauter, Guido
    Izbicki, Jakob R.
    Gros, Stephanie J.
    JOURNAL OF ENZYME INHIBITION AND MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2018, 33 (01) : 1024 - 1033
  • [24] Acidic and Hypoxic Microenvironment in Melanoma: Impact of Tumour Exosomes on Disease Progression
    Boussadia, Zaira
    Gambardella, Adriana Rosa
    Mattei, Fabrizio
    Parolini, Isabella
    CELLS, 2021, 10 (12)
  • [26] INVESTIGATING HOW GLIOBLASTOMA TUMOUR CELLS EXPLOIT THEIR METABOLIC MICROENVIRONMENT
    Shard, Chloe
    Ormsby, Rebecca
    Poonnoose, Santosh
    Toubia, John
    Trim, Paul
    Ebert, Lisa
    Patil, Ashwini
    Gomez, Guillermo
    NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2023, 25
  • [27] Designing ageing conditions in tumour microenvironment-A new possible modality for cancer treatment
    Leibovici, Judith
    Itzhaki, Orit
    Kaptzan, Tatiana
    Skutelsky, Ehud
    Sinai, Judith
    Michowitz, Moshe
    Asfur, Raida
    Siegal, Annette
    Huszar, Monica
    Schiby, Ginnette
    MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 130 (1-2) : 76 - 85
  • [28] The tumour microenvironment influences survival and time to transformation in follicular lymphoma in the rituximab era
    Blaker, Yngvild Nuvin
    Spetalen, Signe
    Brodtkorb, Marianne
    Lingjaerde, Ole Christian
    Beiske, Klaus
    Ostenstad, Bjorn
    Sander, Birgitta
    Wahlin, Bjorn Engelbrekt
    Melen, Christopher Michael
    Myklebust, June Helen
    Holte, Harald
    Delabie, Jan
    Smeland, Erlend Bremertun
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, 2016, 175 (01) : 102 - 114
  • [29] Being cool: how body temperature influences ageing and longevity
    Keil, Gerald
    Cummings, Elizabeth
    de Magalhaes, Joao Pedro
    BIOGERONTOLOGY, 2015, 16 (04) : 383 - 397
  • [30] Being cool: how body temperature influences ageing and longevity
    Gerald Keil
    Elizabeth Cummings
    João Pedro de Magalhães
    Biogerontology, 2015, 16 : 383 - 397