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The role of iron metabolism in cancer therapy focusing on tumor-associated macrophages
Authors:Dandan Dong  Gejing Zhang  Jiancheng Yang  Bin Zhao  Shenghang Wang  Luyao Wang  Ge Zhang  Peng Shang
Institution:1. School of Life Sciences, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi'an Shanxi, China

Key Laboratory for Space Biosciences and Biotechnology, Xi’an Shanxi, China;2. Institute for Advancing Translational Medicine in Bone & Joint Diseases, School of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU), Hong Kong, China;3. Research & Development Institute in Shenzhen, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Shenzhen, China

Abstract:Iron is an essential micronutrient in mammalian cells for basic processes such as DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, and mitochondrial activity. Macrophages play a vital role in iron metabolism, which is tightly linked to their phagocytosis of senescent and death erythrocytes. It is now recognized that the polarization process of macrophages determines the expression profile of genes associated with iron metabolism. Although iron metabolism is strictly controlled by physiology, cancer has recently been connected with disordered iron metabolism. Moreover, in the environment of cancer, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) exhibit an iron release phenotype, which stimulates tumor cell survival and growth. Usually, the abundance of TAMs in the tumor is implicated in poor disease prognosis. Therefore, important attention has been drawn toward the development of tumor immunotherapies targeting these TAMs focussing on iron metabolism and reprogramming polarized phenotypes. Although further systematic research is still required, these efforts are almost certainly valuable in the search for new and effective cancer treatments.
Keywords:cancer therapy  iron metabolism  macrophages polarization  TAMs  tumor microenvironment
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