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The Apoptosis Paradox in Cancer. | LitMetric

The Apoptosis Paradox in Cancer.

Int J Mol Sci

University of Edinburgh Centre for Inflammation Research, Queen's Medical Research Institute, 47, Little France Crescent, Edinburgh BioQuarter, Edinburgh EH16 4TJ, UK.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cancer growth occurs when mutant tumor cells multiply faster than they die, leading to an imbalance in cell population.
  • Apoptosis serves as a natural control on cell numbers by removing damaged or potentially harmful cells, but in high-grade cancers, it can paradoxically coexist with increased levels of apoptosis.
  • The dual role of apoptosis can both suppress tumors by eliminating harmful cells and promote tumor growth by creating an environment that aids tumor survival and therapy resistance.

Article Abstract

Cancer growth represents a dysregulated imbalance between cell gain and cell loss, where the rate of proliferating mutant tumour cells exceeds the rate of those that die. Apoptosis, the most renowned form of programmed cell death, operates as a key physiological mechanism that limits cell population expansion, either to maintain tissue homeostasis or to remove potentially harmful cells, such as those that have sustained DNA damage. Paradoxically, high-grade cancers are generally associated with high constitutive levels of apoptosis. In cancer, cell-autonomous apoptosis constitutes a common tumour suppressor mechanism, a property which is exploited in cancer therapy. By contrast, limited apoptosis in the tumour-cell population also has the potential to promote cell survival and resistance to therapy by conditioning the tumour microenvironment (TME)-including phagocytes and viable tumour cells-and engendering pro-oncogenic effects. Notably, the constitutive apoptosis-mediated activation of cells of the innate immune system can help orchestrate a pro-oncogenic TME and may also effect evasion of cancer treatment. Here, we present an overview of the implications of cell death programmes in tumour biology, with particular focus on apoptosis as a process with "double-edged" consequences: on the one hand, being tumour suppressive through deletion of malignant or pre-malignant cells, while, on the other, being tumour progressive through stimulation of reparatory and regenerative responses in the TME.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8836235PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23031328DOI Listing

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