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The putative role of ferroptosis in gastric cancer: a review

Li Wang, Haibin Wang

2023European Journal of Cancer Prevention23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ferroptosis is a unique cell death modality triggered by iron-dependent lipid peroxidation, with cysteine metabolism and glutathione-dependent antioxidant defence responses as the primary triggering mechanisms. Ferroptosis is an independent tumour suppression mechanism and has been implicated in various disorders. In tumourigenesis, ferroptosis plays a dual role in promoting and inhibiting tumours. P53, NFE2L2, BAP1, HIF, and other tumour suppressor genes regulate ferroptosis, releasing damage-associated molecular patterns or lipid metabolites to influence cellular immune responses. Ferroptosis is also involved in tumour suppression and metabolism. The combination of amino acid, lipid, and iron metabolism is involved in the initiation and execution of ferroptosis, and metabolic regulatory mechanisms also play roles in malignancies. Most investigations into ferroptosis in gastric cancer are concentrated on predictive models, not the underlying processes. This review investigates the underlying mechanisms of ferroptosis, tumour suppressor genes, and the tumour microenvironment.

Topics & Concepts

GPX4Cancer researchCancer cellBiologyMechanism (biology)Immune systemCancerSuppressorLipid peroxidationProgrammed cell deathLipid metabolismCell biologyGlutathioneImmunologyApoptosisAntioxidantBiochemistryGeneticsEpistemologyGlutathione peroxidasePhilosophyEnzymeFerroptosis and cancer prognosisCancer, Lipids, and MetabolismRNA modifications and cancer
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