Tumor Angiogenesis Articles & Analysis
7 articles found
In oncology, CCR1-mediated chemotaxis is increasingly recognized as a driver of the tumor microenvironment. Tumor-associated fibroblasts and macrophages often express CCR1, where they help establish pro-tumor niches by promoting angiogenesis and suppressing anti-tumor immunity. ...
Their roles span across embryonic development, wound healing, angiogenesis, and tumor progression. Measuring growth factor levels in biological samples is crucial for understanding how cells communicate and adapt to physiological changes or pathological insults. ...
Moreover, these interventions enhance the sensitivity of these mice to chemotherapy[11] and curtail angiogenesis. Correspondingly, elevated CD73 expression is frequently observed in human tumors and is associated with a poor prognosis. ...
Aberrant glycosylation is a common hallmark of many malignancies and is important at all stages of tumor growth. Glycosylation regulates a range of physiopathological processes, including cell-cell adhesion, cell-matrix interactions, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, tumor proliferation, invasion, metastasis, and angiogenesis. Different ...
Glycosylation of immune system molecules has been explored for disease marker research. Glycosylation can regulate tumor proliferation, invasion, metastasis, and angiogenesis. Abnormal glycosylation is often considered a sign of cancer. Most tumor markers approved by the FDA are glycoprotein or glycan antigens. ...
Scientists typically characterize macrophages based on various surface markers and secreted factors that are closely associated with inflammation pathogen defense, and tumor defense (M1), anti-inflammation and wound healing (M2a), Immunoregulation (M2b), Immunosuppression and tissue remodeling (M2c), and angiogenesis and tumor promotion (M2d) ...
However, certain cell types thrive in low-O2 environments. Angiogenesis and tumor progression in cancer are routinely either crippled or aided by local exposure to hypoxic conditions, depending on a host of abnormal interactions at the sub-cellular level (Reference Section; 4). In vivo, hypoxia can either i) inhibit proliferation or the spread of cancer, stop ...
ByBaker
