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How cancer hijacks the body?s homeostasis through the neuroendocrine system

Journal

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES
Volume 46, Issue 4, Pages 263-275

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2023.01.003

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During oncogenesis, tumors can affect local and systemic homeostasis by producing cytokines, immune mediators, neurotransmitters, and other substances. They can control the central neuroendocrine and immune systems to promote their own growth and expansion.
During oncogenesis, cancer not only escapes the body's regulatory mechanisms, but also gains the ability to affect local and systemic homeostasis. Specifically, tumors produce cytokines, immune mediators, classical neurotransmitters, hypo-thalamic and pituitary hormones, biogenic amines, melatonin, and glucocorticoids, as demonstrated in human and animal models of cancer. The tumor, through the release of these neurohormonal and immune mediators, can control the main neu-roendocrine centers such as the hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenals, and thyroid to modulate body homeostasis through central regulatory axes. We hypothesize that the tumor-derived catecholamines, serotonin, melatonin, neuropeptides, and other neurotransmitters can affect body and brain functions. Bidirectional commu-nication between local autonomic and sensory nerves and the tumor, with putative effects on the brain, is also envisioned. Overall, we propose that cancers can take control of the central neuroendocrine and immune systems to reset the body homeostasis in a mode favoring its expansion at the expense of the host.

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