The obese adipose tissue microenvironment in cancer development and progression

DF Quail, AJ Dannenberg - Nature Reviews Endocrinology, 2019 - nature.com
Obesity is associated with both increased cancer incidence and progression in multiple
tumour types, and is estimated to contribute to up to 20% of cancer-related deaths. These …

[HTML][HTML] Role of the CXCL8-CXCR1/2 axis in cancer and inflammatory diseases

H Ha, B Debnath, N Neamati - Theranostics, 2017 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The chemokine receptors CXCR1/2 and their ligand CXCL8 are essential for the activation
and trafficking of inflammatory mediators as well as tumor progression and metastasis. The …

Obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cancer risk

T Scully, A Ettela, D LeRoith, EJ Gallagher - Frontiers in oncology, 2021 - frontiersin.org
Obesity and type 2 diabetes have both been associated with increased cancer risk and are
becoming increasingly prevalent. Metabolic abnormalities such as insulin resistance and …

Cancer as a matter of fat: the crosstalk between adipose tissue and tumors

E Lengyel, L Makowski, J DiGiovanni, MG Kolonin - Trends in cancer, 2018 - cell.com
Obesity has been linked to the increased risk and aggressiveness of many types of
carcinoma. A state of chronic inflammation in adipose tissue (AT), resulting in genotoxic …

CXCL1: Gene, Promoter, Regulation of Expression, mRNA Stability, Regulation of Activity in the Intercellular Space

J Korbecki, K Barczak, I Gutowska, D Chlubek… - International journal of …, 2022 - mdpi.com
CXCL1 is one of the most important chemokines, part of a group of chemotactic cytokines
involved in the development of many inflammatory diseases. It activates CXCR2 and, at high …

[HTML][HTML] Contribution of adipose tissue to development of cancer

AJ Cozzo, AM Fuller, L Makowski - Comprehensive Physiology, 2017 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Solid tumor growth and metastasis require the interaction of tumor cells with the surrounding
tissue, leading to a view of tumors as tissue-level phenomena rather than exclusively cell …

The role of tumor microenvironment cells in colorectal cancer (CRC) cachexia

A Kasprzak - International journal of molecular sciences, 2021 - mdpi.com
Cancer cachexia (CC) is a multifactorial syndrome in patients with advanced cancer
characterized by weight loss via skeletal-muscle and adipose-tissue atrophy, catabolic …

CoBATCH for high-throughput single-cell epigenomic profiling

Q Wang, H Xiong, S Ai, X Yu, Y Liu, J Zhang, A He - Molecular cell, 2019 - cell.com
An efficient, generalizable method for genome-wide mapping of single-cell histone
modifications or chromatin-binding proteins is lacking. Here, we develop CoBATCH …

[HTML][HTML] The CXCL8-CXCR1/2 pathways in cancer

Q Liu, A Li, Y Tian, JD Wu, Y Liu, T Li, Y Chen… - Cytokine & growth factor …, 2016 - Elsevier
Persistent infection or chronic inflammation contributes significantly to tumourigenesis and
tumour progression. CXC motif ligand 8 (CXCL8) is a chemokine that acts as an important …

Signals from the adipose microenvironment and the obesity–cancer link—a systematic review

C Himbert, M Delphan, D Scherer, LW Bowers… - Cancer prevention …, 2017 - AACR
Obesity and its associated metabolic dysregulation are established risk factors for many
cancers. However, the biologic mechanisms underlying this relationship remain …