Far Beyond Cancer Immunotherapy: Reversion of Multi-Malignant Phenotypes of Immunotherapeutic-Resistant Cancer by Targeting the NANOG Signaling Axis.
Se Jin OhJaeyoon LeeYukang KimKwon-Ho SongEun Ho ChoMinsung KimHeejae JungTae Woo KimPublished in: Immune network (2020)
Cancer immunotherapy, in the form of vaccination, adoptive cellular transfer, or immune checkpoint inhibitors, has emerged as a promising practice within the field of oncology. However, despite the developing field's potential to revolutionize cancer treatment, the presence of immunotherapeutic-resistant tumor cells in many patients present a challenge and limitation to these immunotherapies. These cells not only indicate immunotherapeutic resistance, but also show multi-modal resistance to conventional therapies, abnormal metabolism, stemness, and metastasis. How can immunotherapeutic-resistant tumor cells render multi-malignant phenotypes? We reasoned that the immune-refractory phenotype could be associated with multi-malignant phenotypes and that these phenotypes are linked together by a factor that acts as the master regulator. In this review, we discussed the role of the embryonic transcription factor NANOG as a crucial master regulator we named "common factor" in multi-malignant phenotypes and presented strategies to overcome multi-malignancy in immunotherapeutic-resistant cancer by restraining the NANOG-mediated multi-malignant signaling axis. Strategies that blunt the NANOG axis could improve the clinical management of therapy-refractory cancer.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- papillary thyroid
- primary care
- squamous cell carcinoma
- squamous cell
- induced apoptosis
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- cancer stem cells
- cell proliferation
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- signaling pathway
- mesenchymal stem cells
- quality improvement
- patient reported outcomes
- pi k akt
- smoking cessation