Obesity and prostate cancer - microenvironmental roles of adipose tissue.
Achinto SahaMikhail G KoloninJohn DiGiovanniPublished in: Nature reviews. Urology (2023)
Obesity is known to have important roles in driving prostate cancer aggressiveness and increased mortality. Multiple mechanisms have been postulated for these clinical observations, including effects of diet and lifestyle, systemic changes in energy balance and hormonal regulation and activation of signalling by growth factors and cytokines and other components of the immune system. Over the past decade, research on obesity has shifted towards investigating the role of peri-prostatic white adipose tissue as an important source of locally produced factors that stimulate prostate cancer progression. Cells that comprise white adipose tissue, the adipocytes and their progenitor adipose stromal cells (ASCs), which proliferate to accommodate white adipose tissue expansion in obesity, have been identified as important drivers of obesity-associated cancer progression. Accumulating evidence suggests that adipocytes are a source of lipids that are used by adjacent prostate cancer cells. However, results of preclinical studies indicate that ASCs promote tumour growth by remodelling extracellular matrix and supporting neovascularization, contributing to the recruitment of immunosuppressive cells, and inducing epithelial-mesenchymal transition through paracrine signalling. Because epithelial-mesenchymal transition is associated with cancer chemotherapy resistance and metastasis, ASCs are considered to be potential targets of therapies that could be developed to suppress cancer aggressiveness in patients with obesity.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- prostate cancer
- weight loss
- high fat diet induced
- metabolic syndrome
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high fat diet
- type diabetes
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- radical prostatectomy
- papillary thyroid
- induced apoptosis
- skeletal muscle
- extracellular matrix
- physical activity
- transforming growth factor
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- climate change
- cell death
- mesenchymal stem cells
- locally advanced
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- childhood cancer