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Emerging Roles of Ceramides in Breast Cancer Biology and Therapy

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911178

Keywords

ceramides; breast cancer; apoptosis; sphingolipids; drug resistance

Funding

  1. Department of Defense (DoD) [W81XWH-20-10486, W81XWH-20-1-0487]

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The imbalance between cell proliferation and cell death is a classic hallmark of cancer, and ceramide, a bioactive sphingolipid, is implicated in cancer. In addition to its effects on cell death and therapeutic efficacy, ceramide turnover to downstream sphingolipids plays an equally important role in driving pro-tumorigenic phenotypes.
One of the classic hallmarks of cancer is the imbalance between elevated cell proliferation and reduced cell death. Ceramide, a bioactive sphingolipid that can regulate this balance, has long been implicated in cancer. While the effects of ceramide on cell death and therapeutic efficacy are well established, emerging evidence indicates that ceramide turnover to downstream sphingolipids, such as sphingomyelin, hexosylceramides, sphingosine-1-phosphate, and ceramide-1-phosphate, is equally important in driving pro-tumorigenic phenotypes, such as proliferation, survival, migration, stemness, and therapy resistance. The complex and dynamic sphingolipid network has been extensively studied in several cancers, including breast cancer, to find key sphingolipidomic alterations that can be exploited to develop new therapeutic strategies to improve patient outcomes. Here, we review how the current literature shapes our understanding of how ceramide synthesis and turnover are altered in breast cancer and how these changes offer potential strategies to improve breast cancer therapy.

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