Inflammation and breast cancer. Microenvironmental factors regulating macrophage function in breast tumours: hypoxia and angiopoietin-2
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* Corresponding author: Claire E Lewis claire.lewis@sheffield.ac.uk
Tumour Targeting Group, Academic Unit of Pathology, Section of Infection, Inflammation and Immunity, The Sir Henry Wellcome Laboratories for Medical Research, University of Sheffield Medical School, Beech Hill Road, Sheffield S10 2RX, UK
Breast Cancer Research 2007, 9:209 doi:10.1186/bcr1679
Published: 15 June 2007Abstract
Considerable evidence has now accumulated for tumour-associated macrophages stimulating key aspects of tumour progression, including the proliferation, survival and metastasis of tumour cells, tumour angiogenesis and suppression of the anti-tumour functions of other immune effectors at the tumour site. Tumour micro-environmental factors such as hypoxia have profound, direct effects on these cells, stimulating many of their pro-tumour functions. Hypoxia also does so indirectly by stimulating the release of the cytokine angiopoietin-2 from tumour cells and tumour blood vessels. This in turn then recruits Tie-2-expressing monocytes into tumours from the bloodstream and inhibits their production of anti-apoptotic and anti-angiogenic cytokines.