Litcius/Paper detail

Mitochondrial immune regulation and anti-tumor immunotherapy strategies targeting mitochondria

Rilan Bai, Jiuwei Cui

2023Cancer Letters70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cancer cells adapt to increasing energy and biosynthetic demands by reprogramming their metabolic pathways. Mitochondria are important organelles for the metabolic reprogramming of tumor cells. In addition to supplying energy, they play crucial roles in the survival, immune evasion, tumor progression, and treatment resistance of the hypoxic tumor microenvironment (TME) in cancer cells. With the development of the life sciences, scientists have gained an in-depth understanding of immunity, metabolism, and cancer, and numerous studies have emphasized that mitochondria are essential for tumor immune escape and the regulation of immune cell metabolism and activation. Moreover, recent evidence suggests that targeting the mitochondria-related pathway with anticancer drugs can initiate the killing of cancer cells by increasing the ability of cancer cells to be recognized by immune cells, tumor antigen presentation ability, and the anti-tumor function of immune cells. This review discusses the effects of mitochondrial morphology and function on the phenotype and function of immune cells under normal and TME conditions, the effects of mitochondrial changes in tumors and microenvironments on tumor immune escape and immune cell function, and finally focuses on the recent research progress and future challenges of novel anti-tumor immunotherapy strategies targeting mitochondria.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemTumor microenvironmentMitochondrionBiologyImmunotherapyReprogrammingCancer immunotherapyCancer cellCancerCancer researchTumor progressionCell biologyImmunologyCellBiochemistryGeneticsCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismAutophagy in Disease and TherapyPolyamine Metabolism and Applications