Litcius/Paper detail

Transmembrane mucins in lung adenocarcinoma: understanding of current molecular mechanisms and clinical applications

Xiaoqing Li, Ying Chen, Rui Lan, Peng Liu, Kai Xiong, Haibo Teng, Lili Tao, Shan Yu, Guiping Han

2025Cell Death Discovery11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The mucin family is a group of highly glycosylated macromolecules widely present in human epithelial cells and with subtypes of secreted and membrane-associated forms. The membrane-associated mucins, known as transmembrane mucins, are not only involved in the formation of mucus barrier but also regulate cell signal transduction in physiological and pathological status. Transmembrane mucins could contribute to lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) proliferation, apoptosis, angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis, and remodel the immune microenvironment involved in immune escape. Furthermore, transmembrane mucins have been explored as potential LUAD indicators for diagnosis and prognosis. The development of targeted therapy and immunotherapeutic drugs targeting transmembrane mucins has also provided broad application prospects for clinic. In the following review, we summarize the characteristic structures of diverse transmembrane mucins, regulatory roles in promoting the progression of LUAD, and the current situation of diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic strategies based on transmembrane mucins.

Topics & Concepts

MucinTransmembrane proteinBiologyImmune systemCell biologyCancer researchImmunologyBiochemistryReceptorGlycosylation and Glycoproteins ResearchGalectins and Cancer BiologyLung Cancer Research Studies