Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer

博士 === 臺北醫學大學 === 臨床醫學研究所 === 105 === Whilst traditional chemotherapy kills a fraction of tumor cells, it also activates the stroma and can promote the growth and survival of residual cancer cells to foster tumor recurrence and metastasis. Accordingly, overcoming the host response induced by chemoth...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tze-Sian Chan, 張智翔
Other Authors: Gi-Shih Lien
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/j865d3
id ndltd-TW-105TMC05521002
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-TW-105TMC055210022019-10-28T05:13:11Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/j865d3 Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer 化學治療誘發之間質上皮訊息及其在基質纖維化腫瘤之致癌角色 Tze-Sian Chan 張智翔 博士 臺北醫學大學 臨床醫學研究所 105 Whilst traditional chemotherapy kills a fraction of tumor cells, it also activates the stroma and can promote the growth and survival of residual cancer cells to foster tumor recurrence and metastasis. Accordingly, overcoming the host response induced by chemotherapy could substantially improve therapeutic outcome and patient survival. Resistance to treatment and metastasis have been attributed to expansion of stem-like tumor-initiating cells (TICs). Molecular analysis of the tumor stroma in neoadjuvant-chemotherapy-treated human desmoplastic cancers and orthotopic tumor xenografts revealed that traditional maximal-tolerated-dose chemotherapy, regardless of the agents used, induces persistent STAT-1 and NF-κB activity in carcinoma-associated fibroblasts. This induction results in the expression and secretion of ELR-motif-positive (ELR+) chemokines, which signal through CXCR-2 on carcinoma cells to trigger their phenotypic conversion into TICs and promote their invasive behaviors, leading to paradoxical tumor aggression following therapy. By contrast, the same overall dose administered as a low-dose metronomic chemotherapy regimen largely prevented therapy-induced stromal ELR+-chemokine paracrine signaling, thus enhancing treatment response and extending survival of mice carrying desmoplastic cancers. These studies illustrate the importance of stroma in cancer therapy and how its impact on treatment resistance could be tempered by altering the dosing schedule of systemic chemotherapy. Gi-Shih Lien 連吉時 2017 學位論文 ; thesis 143 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
description 博士 === 臺北醫學大學 === 臨床醫學研究所 === 105 === Whilst traditional chemotherapy kills a fraction of tumor cells, it also activates the stroma and can promote the growth and survival of residual cancer cells to foster tumor recurrence and metastasis. Accordingly, overcoming the host response induced by chemotherapy could substantially improve therapeutic outcome and patient survival. Resistance to treatment and metastasis have been attributed to expansion of stem-like tumor-initiating cells (TICs). Molecular analysis of the tumor stroma in neoadjuvant-chemotherapy-treated human desmoplastic cancers and orthotopic tumor xenografts revealed that traditional maximal-tolerated-dose chemotherapy, regardless of the agents used, induces persistent STAT-1 and NF-κB activity in carcinoma-associated fibroblasts. This induction results in the expression and secretion of ELR-motif-positive (ELR+) chemokines, which signal through CXCR-2 on carcinoma cells to trigger their phenotypic conversion into TICs and promote their invasive behaviors, leading to paradoxical tumor aggression following therapy. By contrast, the same overall dose administered as a low-dose metronomic chemotherapy regimen largely prevented therapy-induced stromal ELR+-chemokine paracrine signaling, thus enhancing treatment response and extending survival of mice carrying desmoplastic cancers. These studies illustrate the importance of stroma in cancer therapy and how its impact on treatment resistance could be tempered by altering the dosing schedule of systemic chemotherapy.
author2 Gi-Shih Lien
author_facet Gi-Shih Lien
Tze-Sian Chan
張智翔
author Tze-Sian Chan
張智翔
spellingShingle Tze-Sian Chan
張智翔
Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
author_sort Tze-Sian Chan
title Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
title_short Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
title_full Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
title_fullStr Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Chemotherapy-induced Stromal-epithelial Signaling and its Oncogenic Role in Desmoplastic Cancer
title_sort chemotherapy-induced stromal-epithelial signaling and its oncogenic role in desmoplastic cancer
publishDate 2017
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/j865d3
work_keys_str_mv AT tzesianchan chemotherapyinducedstromalepithelialsignalinganditsoncogenicroleindesmoplasticcancer
AT zhāngzhìxiáng chemotherapyinducedstromalepithelialsignalinganditsoncogenicroleindesmoplasticcancer
AT tzesianchan huàxuézhìliáoyòufāzhījiānzhìshàngpíxùnxījíqízàijīzhìxiānwéihuàzhǒngliúzhīzhìáijiǎosè
AT zhāngzhìxiáng huàxuézhìliáoyòufāzhījiānzhìshàngpíxùnxījíqízàijīzhìxiānwéihuàzhǒngliúzhīzhìáijiǎosè
_version_ 1719279909416730624