Primary cilia: Structure, dynamics, and roles in cancer cells and tumor microenvironment

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Abstract

Despite the initiation of tumor arises from tumorigenic transformation signaling in cancer cells, cancer cell survival, invasion, and metastasis also require a dynamic and reciprocal association with extracellular signaling from tumor microenvironment (TME). Primary cilia are the antenna-like structure that mediate signaling sensation and transduction in different tissues and cells. Recent studies have started to uncover that the heterogeneous ciliation in cancer cells and cells from the TME in tumor growth impels asymmetric paracellular signaling in the TME, indicating the essential functions of primary cilia in homeostasis maintenance of both cancer cells and the TME. In this review, we discussed recent advances in the structure and assembly of primary cilia, and the role of primary cilia in tumor and TME formation, as well as the therapeutic potentials that target ciliary dynamics and signaling from the cells in different tumors and the TME.

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Guan, Y. T., Zhang, C., Zhang, H. Y., Wei, W. L., Yue, W., Zhao, W., & Zhang, D. H. (2023, August 1). Primary cilia: Structure, dynamics, and roles in cancer cells and tumor microenvironment. Journal of Cellular Physiology. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.31092

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