The fate of the tumor in the hands of microenvironment: role of TAMs and mTOR pathway
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Since 2000, written with elegance and accuracy, Hanahan and Weinberg have proposed six major hallmarks of cancer and, together,
they provide great advances to the understanding of tumoral biology. Our knowledge about tumor behavior has improved and the
investigators have now recognized that inflammatory microenvironment may be a new feature for the tumor entities. Macrophages
are considered as an important component of tumoral microenvironment. Biologically, two forms of activated macrophages can be
observed: classically activated macrophages (M1) and alternative activated macrophages (M2). Despite the canonical pathways that
control this puzzle of macrophages polarization, recently, mTOR signaling pathway has been implicated as an important piece in
determining the metabolic and functional differentiation of M1 and M2 profiles. Currently, it is believed that macrophages related to
tumoral microenvironment present an “M2-like” feature promoting an immunosuppressive microenvironment enhancing tumoral
angiogenesis, growth, and metastasis. In the present review we discuss the role of macrophages in the tumor microenvironment
and the role of mTOR pathway in M1 and M2 differentiation. We also discuss the recent findings in M1 and M2 polarization as a
possible target in the cancer therapy.
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SOAVE, Danilo Figueiredo et al. The fate of the tumor in the hands of microenvironment: role of TAMs and mTOR pathway. Mediators of Inflammation, Oxford, v. 2016, e8910520, 2016. DOI: 10.1155/2016/8910520. Disponível em: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1155/2016/8910520. Acesso em: 6 fev. 2025.