姜黄素
促炎细胞因子
癌症研究
表型
重编程
生物
肿瘤微环境
M2巨噬细胞
巨噬细胞
肿瘤进展
免疫系统
细胞
免疫学
药理学
体外
炎症
癌症
生物化学
基因
遗传学
作者
Mingjing Jiang,Ying Qi,Wei Huang,Ying Lin,Bo Li
出处
期刊:Cells
[Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute]
日期:2022-11-02
卷期号:11 (21): 3473-3473
被引量:24
标识
DOI:10.3390/cells11213473
摘要
M1 phenotype macrophages have anticancer characteristics, whereas M2 phenotype macrophages promote tumor growth and metastasis. A higher M1/M2 ratio, therefore, has a beneficial effect on the tumor immune microenvironment, thereby inhibiting tumor growth. The natural alkaloid curcumin is found to have anticancer properties. However, the mechanism remains unclear. In this study, a cell co-culture system and M2 macrophage model were used to evaluate the effects of curcumin on tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) phenotypes. Our results demonstrate that curcumin reprogrammed the M2 macrophages by reducing the level of anti-inflammatory cytokines (TGF-β, Arg-1, and IL-10) and an M2 surface marker (CD206) induced by Cal27 cells or IL-4, as well as upregulating proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, iNOS, and IL-6) and an M1 surface marker (CD86). The in vitro assays suggested that curcumin treatment suppressed the migration and invasion of the Cal27 cells induced by the M2-like macrophages. Mechanistically, the repolarization of TAMs may be attributed to the inhibition of monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A)/STAT6 signaling after curcumin treatment. Collectively, our results show that the anticancer effects of curcumin could be explained by reprogramming TAMs from a protumor phenotype towards an antitumor phenotype.
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