Репозиторий Dspace

Hypoxia‑inducible factors: master regulators of hypoxic tumor immune escape

Показать сокращенную информацию

dc.rights.license CC BY eng
dc.contributor.author Wu, Qinghua cze
dc.contributor.author You, Li cze
dc.contributor.author Nepovimová, Eugenie cze
dc.contributor.author Heger, Zbyněk cze
dc.contributor.author Wu, Wenda cze
dc.contributor.author Kuča, Kamil cze
dc.contributor.author Adam, Vojtěch cze
dc.date.accessioned 2025-12-05T11:07:17Z
dc.date.available 2025-12-05T11:07:17Z
dc.date.issued 2022 eng
dc.identifier.issn 1756-8722 eng
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12603/1476
dc.description.abstract Hypoxia, a common feature of the tumor microenvironment in various types of cancers, weakens cytotoxic T cell function and causes recruitment of regulatory T cells, thereby reducing tumoral immunogenicity. Studies have demonstrated that hypoxia and hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) 1 and 2 alpha (HIF1A and HIF2A) are involved in tumor immune escape. Under hypoxia, activation of HIF1A induces a series of signaling events, including through programmed death receptor-1/programmed death ligand-1. Moreover, hypoxia triggers shedding of complex class I chain-associated molecules through nitric oxide signaling impairment to disrupt immune surveillance by natural killer cells. The HIF-1-galactose-3-O-sulfotransferase 1-sulfatide axis enhances tumor immune escape via increased tumor cell-platelet binding. HIF2A upregulates stem cell factor expression to recruit tumor-infiltrating mast cells and increase levels of cytokines interleukin-10 and transforming growth factor-β, resulting in an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Additionally, HIF1A upregulates expression of tumor-associated long noncoding RNAs and suppresses immune cell function, enabling tumor immune escape. Overall, elucidating the underlying mechanisms by which HIFs promote evasion of tumor immune surveillance will allow for targeting HIF in tumor treatment. This review discusses the current knowledge of how hypoxia and HIFs facilitate tumor immune escape, with evidence to date implicating HIF1A as a molecular target in such immune escape. This review provides further insight into the mechanism of tumor immune escape, and strategies for tumor immunotherapy are suggested. eng
dc.format p. "Article Number: 77" eng
dc.language.iso eng eng
dc.publisher BMC eng
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of Hematology and Oncology, volume 15, issue: 1 eng
dc.subject Hypoxia eng
dc.subject Hypoxia-inducible factors eng
dc.subject Tumor disease eng
dc.subject Immunotherapy eng
dc.subject Personalized medicine eng
dc.title Hypoxia‑inducible factors: master regulators of hypoxic tumor immune escape eng
dc.type article eng
dc.identifier.obd 43878803 eng
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s13045-022-01292-6 eng
dc.publicationstatus postprint eng
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.source.url https://jhoonline.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13045-022-01292-6 cze
dc.relation.publisherversion https://jhoonline.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13045-022-01292-6 eng
dc.rights.access Open Access eng


Файлы в этом документе

Данный элемент включен в следующие коллекции

Показать сокращенную информацию

Поиск в DSpace


Просмотр

Моя учетная запись