Hypoxia-shaped vascular niche for cancer stem cells

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Abstract

The tumour microenvironment, long considered as determining cancer development, still offers research fields to define hallmarks of cancer. An early key-step, the "angiogenic switch", allows tumour growth. Pathologic angiogenesis is a cancer hallmark as it features results of tumour-specific properties that can be summarised as a response to hypoxia. The hypoxic state occurs when the tumour mass reaches a volume sufficient not to permit oxygen diffusion inside the tumour centre. Thus tumour cells turn on adaptation mechanisms to the low pO2 level, inducing biochemical responses in terms of cytokines/chemokines/receptors and consequently recruitment of specific cell types, as well as cell-selection inside the tumour. Moreover, these changes are orchestrated by the microRNA balance strongly reflecting the hypoxic milieu and mediating the cross-talk between endothelial and tumour cells. MicroRNAs control of the endothelial precursor-vascular settings shapes the niche for selection of cancer stem cells.

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Collet, G., El Hafny-Rahbi, B., Nadim, M., Tejchman, A., Klimkiewicz, K., & Kieda, C. (2015). Hypoxia-shaped vascular niche for cancer stem cells. Wspolczesna Onkologia. Termedia Publishing House Ltd. https://doi.org/10.5114/wo.2014.47130

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