Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanism and effect of stress granule formation in cancer and its potential roles in breast cancer therapy

Taobo Hu, Wei Hou, Enhua Xiao, Mengping Long

2021Genes & Diseases26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stress granules are non-membranous cytoplasmic foci induced by various stress conditions. It is a protective strategy used by cells to suppress overall translation during stress. In cancer cells, it was thought that the formation of stress granules could protect them from apoptosis and induces resistance towards anti-cancer drugs or radiation treatment which makes the stress granules a potential target for cancer treatment. However, most of our understanding of stress granules are still in the stage of molecular and cell biology, and a transitional gap for its actual effect on clinical settings remains. In this review, we summarize the mechanism and effect of stress granules formation in cancer and try to illuminate its potential applications in cancer therapy, using breast cancer as an example.

Topics & Concepts

Stress granuleBreast cancerCancerMechanism (biology)Cancer cellGranule (geology)Cancer researchApoptosisCytoplasmTranslation (biology)MedicineBioinformaticsBiologyCell biologyInternal medicineBiochemistryPaleontologyGenePhilosophyEpistemologyMessenger RNAEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseRNA Research and SplicingHeat shock proteins research