About this Research Topic
Indeed, innate immune cells have the ability to recognize and orchestrate an antitumor response leading to cancer cell death, however in the meantime they can become pro-tumorigenic and help various critical steps of tumor growth, such as tumor progression, invasiveness, dissemination and clinical outcome. Also, the microbiota can play an important role in different types of cancers, regulating tumor angiogenesis, metastasis and efficacy of therapies.
For cell growth, progression and dissemination, tumor cells must interact with innate immune cells in order to regulate a complex modified tissue compartment. In the tumor microenvironment, there are different key processes that must be established to ensure tumor growth, such as triggering a tumor promoting inflammation, inducing an antigenic immune evasion, activating an angiogenesis switch, and driving metastatic competence. All these factors, points out the key role of the immune system in neoplastic disease.
The fine knowledge of all the actors supporting vascular networks of growing tumors, as well as inhibitory signaling pathways represent the challenge of the new therapies, in particular combined approaches using immune checkpoint inhibitors and antiangiogenic therapies.
Growing data have highlighted a key role of various microbiota in the inflammatory response and in the angiogenic process in several associated human diseases including cancer.
The aim of this Research Topic is to provide a broad overview on the topic of Innate immune-Cancer cell crosstalk together with the microbiota regulating tumor angiogenesis, progression and metastasis” in the context of human cancers, preclinical cancer models, drug resistance, and immunotherapies.
To this end, we welcome experts in this field to contribute with Original Research, Mini-Review, Review, and Perspective articles. Contributions are not limited to the fields that are mentioned in the keywords.
Keywords: Cancer, Tumor microenvironment, Inflammatory cells, Angiogenesis, Microbiota, Microbiome, Metastasis, Immunotherapies
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