Advances in Research on the Effects and Mechanisms of Chemokines and Their Receptors in Cancer

Cancer is a common and intractable disease that seriously affects quality of life of patients and imposes heavy economic burden on families and the entire society. Current medications and intervention strategies for cancer have respective shortcomings. In recent years, it has been increasingly spotlighted that chemokines and their receptors play vital roles in the pathophysiology of cancer. Chemokines are a class of structurally similar short-chain secreted proteins that initiate intracellular signaling pathways through the activation of corresponding G protein-coupled receptors and participate in physiological and pathological processes such as cell migration and proliferation. Studies have shown that chemokines and their receptors have close relationships with cancer epigenetic regulation, growth, progression, invasion, metastasis, and angiogenesis. Chemokines and their receptors may also serve as potential targets for cancer treatment. We herein summarize recent research progresses on anti-tumor effects and mechanisms of chemokines and their receptors, suggesting avenues for future studies. Perspectives for upcoming explorations, such as development of multi-targeted chemokine-based anti-tumor drugs, are also discussed in the present review.

Authors
Xu Jing1, 2 , Li Jing-quan3 , Chen Qi-lei4 , Shestakova Elena A.5 , Misyurin Vsevolod A.5 , Pokrovsky Vadim S. 5, 6 , Tchevkina Elena M.5 , Chen Hu-biao4 , Song Hang2 , Zhang Jian-ye1
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Language
English
Pages
920779
Status
Published
Volume
13
Year
2022
Organizations
  • 1 Guangzhou Municipal and Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Molecular Target & Clinical Pharmacology, NMPA and State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences and the Fifth Affiliated Hospital, Guangzhou Medical University
  • 2 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine, Anhui University of Chinese Medicine
  • 3 The First Affiliated Hospital, Hainan Medical University
  • 4 School of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University
  • 5 N.N. Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
  • 6 Department of Biochemistry, People’s Friendship University
Date of creation
19.01.2023
Date of change
19.01.2023
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/93223/
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