Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
May 2022
The periprostatic adipose tissue (PPAT) is a site of invasion of prostate cancer (PCa) and is part of the microenvironment. It was shown that PPAT secretes factors and fatty acids (FAs) that alter the microenvironment of the PCa. The PPAT secretome of patients with PCa-T3 stage (PPAT-T3) has a metabolic profile enriched in several pathways related to energy production, indicating a greater energy requirement by the tumor, when compared to that of patients in the PCa-T2 stage (PPAT-T2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is a limited tradition of using films in healthcare education, although it is constantly developing. Further, to understand complex concepts, such as vulnerability and resilience, is fundamental to improving nursing education.
Objective: This study aims to explore how a combined approach, using films and expert patients, could influence nursing education on the topics of vulnerability and resilience.
Background/aim: This study examined the potential role of natural triterpenoids lupeol, calenduladiol and heliantriol B2, and a set of 19 derivatives, as antiproliferative and antimetastatic agents against prostate cancer cells.
Materials And Methods: Natural triterpenoids were isolated from Chuqiraga erinaceae. Analogs were obtained by transformations of lupeol and calenduladiol.
Background/aim: Periprostatic adipose tissue (PPAT) directs tumour behaviour. Microenvironment secretome provides information related to its biology. This study was performed to identify secreted proteins by PPAT, from both prostate cancer and benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTumor progression depends on the tumor-stroma interaction. In the breast, adipose tissue is the predominant stromal type. We have previously demonstrated that conditioned media (CMs) from explants of human adipose tissue of tumor breasts (hATT) increase proliferation and migration of breast cancer epithelial cells when compared to human adipose tissue from normal breasts (hATN).
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