Litcius/Paper detail

Versican and Versican-matrikines in Cancer Progression, Inflammation, and Immunity

Athanasios Papadas, Garrett Arauz, Alexander Cicala, Joshua Wiesner, Fotis Asimakopoulos

2020Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry77 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Versican is an extracellular matrix proteoglycan with key roles in multiple facets of cancer development, ranging from proliferative signaling, evasion of growth-suppressor pathways, regulation of cell death, promotion of neoangiogenesis, and tissue invasion and metastasis. Multiple lines of evidence implicate versican and its bioactive proteolytic fragments (matrikines) in the regulation of cancer inflammation and antitumor immune responses. The understanding of the dynamics of versican deposition/accumulation and its proteolytic turnover holds potential for the development of novel immune biomarkers as well as approaches to reset the immune thermostat of tumors, thus promoting efficacy of modern immunotherapies. This article summarizes work from several laboratories, including ours, on the role of this central matrix proteoglycan in tumor progression as well as tumor-immune cell cross-talk.

Topics & Concepts

VersicanImmune systemExtracellular matrixInflammationCancer researchTumor progressionTumor microenvironmentBiologyImmunologyCancerCell biologyProteoglycanGeneticsProteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans researchGlycosylation and Glycoproteins ResearchProtease and Inhibitor Mechanisms