4.7 Review

Effects of tumor metabolic microenvironment on regulatory T cells

Journal

MOLECULAR CANCER
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12943-018-0913-y

Keywords

Cancer metabolism microenvironment; Regulatory T cells; Hypoxia; Low pH; Signaling pathway

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81572787, 81672683, 81672993, 81772928, 81702907, 81772901]
  2. Overseas Expertise Introduction Project for Discipline Innovation (111 Project) [111-2-12]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province [2016JC2035, 2017SK2105, 2018JJ3815, 2018JJ3704, 2018SK21210, 2018SK21211]
  4. Central South University Graduate Research and Innovation Project [2018zzts080, 2018zzts828]
  5. Mittal Student Innovation Program [201810533271]

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Recent studies have shown that on one hand, tumors need to obtain a sufficient energy supply, and on the other hand they must evade the body's immune surveillance. Because of their metabolic reprogramming characteristics, tumors can modify the physicochemical properties of the microenvironment, which in turn affects the biological characteristics of the cells infiltrating them. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a subset of T cells that regulate immune responses in the body. They exist in large quantities in the tumor microenvironment and exert immunosuppressive effects. The main effect of tumor microenvironment on Tregs is to promote their differentiation, proliferation, secretion of immunosuppressive factors, and chemotactic recruitment to play a role in immunosuppression in tumor tissues. This review focuses on cell metabolism reprogramming and the most significant features of the tumor microenvironment relative to the functional effects on Tregs, highlighting our understanding of the mechanisms of tumor immune evasion and providing new directions for tumor immunotherapy.

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