[Frontiers in Bioscience S2, 176-183, January 1, 2010]

Roles of inflammation in cancer initiation, progression, and metastasis

Sandeep Rajput1, Andrew Wilber1, 2

1Department of Medical Microbiology, Immunology and Cell Biology; 2Deparment of Surgery and Simmons Cooper Cancer Institute, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL 62702 USA

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. Inflammatory factors involved in formation of the tumor microenvironment
3.1. Cytokines
3.2. Cyclooxygenases
3.3. Hypoxia Inducible Factor
3.4. Nuclear Factor-Kappa Beta
3.5. Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase
4. Characteristics of the tumor microenvironment
5. Inflammation and the tumor microenvironment
6. Role of inflammation in cancer development: evidence from epidemiological and clinical studies
7. Signaling pathways involved in tumor development
8. Drug targets
9. Summary and perspective 10. References

1. ABSTRACT

Inflammatory cells and signals contribute to the initiation and development of cancer. In fact, persistent inflammatory conditions resulting from infection or injury can exist before a normal cell is transformed into a cancer cell. Situations of chronic inflammation can promote genomic instability leading to DNA damage, oncogene activation, or impaired function of a tumor suppressor. Alternatively, cancer development unrelated to inflammation can stimulate the development of an inflammatory microenvironment that promotes tumor cell proliferation. Whether chronic or tumor-derived, inflammation and inflammation-related stimuli within the tumor microenvironment permits proliferation and survival of cancer cells, promotes blood and lymphatic vessel formation, and aids in invasion and metastasis. The inflammatory status of the tumor microenvironment can act to quell the body's natural immune response and effectively ameliorate a positive response to many commonly used anti-cancer antibodies and chemotherapeutic agents. New evidence suggests that the molecular pathways and consequences of inflammation specifically related to the tumor microenvironment are starting to be understood. This new information implicates novel cellular targets that could lead to improved diagnosis and treatment for a variety of solid malignancies.