Molecular Biology of Brain Metastases.

Ho-Shin Gwak
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Brain metastases (BMs) often occur in patients with lung cancer, breast cancer, and melanoma and are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality. The incidence of BM has increased with advanced neuroimaging and prolonged overall survival of cancer patients. With the advancement of local treatment modalities, including stereotactic radiosurgery and navigation-guided microsurgery, BM can be controlled long-term, even in cases with multiple lesions. However, radiation/chemotherapeutic agents are also toxic to the brain, usually irreversibly and cumulatively, and it remains difficult to completely cure BM. Thus, we must understand the molecular events that begin and sustain BM to develop effective targeted therapies and tools to prevent local and distant treatment failure. BM most often spreads hematogenously, and the blood-brain barrier (BBB) presents the first hurdle for disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) entering the brain parenchyma. Nevertheless, how the DTCs cross the BBB and settle on relatively infertile central nervous system tissue remains unknown. Even after successfully taking up residence in the brain, the unique tumor microenvironment is marked by restricted aerobic glycolysis metabolism and limited lymphocyte infiltration. Brain organotropism, certain phenotype of primary cancers that favors brain metastasis, may result from somatic mutation or epigenetic modulation. Recent studies revealed that exosome secretion from primary cancer or over-expression of proteolytic enzymes can "pre-condition" brain vasculoendothelial cells. The concept of the "metastatic niche," where resident DTCs remain dormant and protected from systemic chemotherapy and antigen exposure before proliferation, is supported by clinical observation of BM in patients clearing systemic cancer and experimental evidence of the interaction between cancer cells and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. This review examines extant research on the metastatic cascade of BM through the molecular events that create and sustain BM to reveal clues that can assist the development of effective targeted therapies that treat established BMs and prevent BM recurrence.

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脑转移瘤的分子生物学。
脑转移瘤(BMs)常发生在肺癌、乳腺癌和黑色素瘤患者中,是发病率和死亡率的主要原因。随着神经影像学的发展和肿瘤患者总生存期的延长,脑转移的发生率也随之增加。随着局部治疗方式的进步,包括立体定向放射外科手术和导航引导显微外科手术,即使在多发病灶的情况下,也可以长期控制BM。然而,放射/化疗药物对脑也有毒性,通常是不可逆的和累积的,并且很难完全治愈脑转移。因此,我们必须了解开始和维持脑转移的分子事件,以开发有效的靶向治疗和工具,以防止局部和远处治疗失败。脑转移最常发生血源性扩散,血脑屏障(BBB)是播散性肿瘤细胞(dtc)进入脑实质的第一道障碍。然而,dtc如何穿过血脑屏障并定居在相对不育的中枢神经系统组织仍不清楚。即使在成功地在大脑中定居后,独特的肿瘤微环境也以有氧糖酵解代谢受限和淋巴细胞浸润受限为特征。脑器官亲和性是原发癌的一种有利于脑转移的表型,可能是由体细胞突变或表观遗传调节引起的。最近的研究表明,原发性癌症的外泌体分泌或蛋白水解酶的过度表达可以“预先调理”脑血管内皮细胞。“转移生态位”的概念,即常驻dtc在增殖前保持休眠状态,免受全身化疗和抗原暴露的影响,得到了BM清除全身癌症患者的临床观察和癌细胞与肿瘤浸润淋巴细胞相互作用的实验证据的支持。本文回顾了现有的关于脑转移级联的研究,通过产生和维持脑转移的分子事件来揭示有助于开发有效的靶向治疗方法来治疗已建立的脑转移并防止脑转移复发的线索。
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