Publication | Open Access
Hypoxia-inducible factors: a central link between inflammation and cancer
201
Citations
111
References
2016
Year
Promote Tumor GrowthHypoxia-inducible FactorsImmunologyPathologyDynamic BalanceCancer BiologyTumor BiologyOxidative StressInflammationRedox RegulatorTumor ImmunityCancer Cell BiologyCancer MetabolismMolecular OncologyCancer ResearchMedicineTumor GrowthHypoxia (Medicine)Immune SurveillanceCancer TreatmentCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentOncologyCancer Growth
The tumor immune response is in a dynamic balance between antitumor mechanisms, which serve to decrease cancer growth, and the protumor inflammatory response, which increases immune tolerance, cell survival, and proliferation. Hypoxia and expression of HIF-1α and HIF-2α are characteristic features of all solid tumors. HIF signaling serves as a major adaptive mechanism in tumor growth in a hypoxic microenvironment. HIFs represent a critical signaling node in the switch to protumorigenic inflammatory responses through recruitment of protumor immune cells and altered immune cell effector functions to suppress antitumor immune responses and promote tumor growth through direct growth-promoting cytokine production, angiogenesis, and ROS production. Modulating HIF function will be an important mechanism to dampen the tumor-promoting inflammatory response and inhibit cancer growth.
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