4.7 Review

Hyaluronan Functions in Wound Repair That Are Captured to Fuel Breast Cancer Progression

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11111551

Keywords

hyaluronan; RHAMM; CD44; wound repair; breast cancer

Funding

  1. American Cancer Society Clinical Scientist Development Scholar program [132574-CSDG-18-139-01-CSM]

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Signaling from actively remodeling extracellular matrix, particularly involving hyaluronan, plays a critical role in tissue repair and disease progression, such as metastatic cancer. This review discusses the multifunctional nature of hyaluronan and its receptors in wound healing, as well as the deregulation of HA metabolism in malignant progression and the potential for targeting HA in breast cancer management.
Signaling from an actively remodeling extracellular matrix (ECM) has emerged as a critical factor in regulating both the repair of tissue injuries and the progression of diseases such as metastatic cancer. Hyaluronan (HA) is a major component of the ECM that normally functions in tissue injury to sequentially promote then suppress inflammation and fibrosis, a duality in which is featured, and regulated in, wound repair. These essential response-to-injury functions of HA in the microenvironment are hijacked by tumor cells for invasion and avoidance of immune detection. In this review, we first discuss the numerous size-dependent functions of HA and emphasize the multifunctional nature of two of its receptors (CD44 and RHAMM) in regulating the signaling duality of HA in excisional wound healing. This is followed by a discussion of how HA metabolism is de-regulated in malignant progression and how targeting HA might be used to better manage breast cancer progression.

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