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LINK . SPRINGER . COM {}

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We are analyzing https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10555-022-10059-x.

Title:
The adipocyte microenvironment and cancer | Cancer and Metastasis Reviews
Description:
Many epithelial tumors grow in the vicinity of or metastasize to adipose tissue. As tumors develop, crosstalk between adipose tissue and cancer cells leads to changes in adipocyte function and paracrine signaling, promoting a microenvironment that supports tumor growth. Over the last decade, it became clear that tumor cells co-opt adipocytes in the tumor microenvironment, converting them into cancer-associated adipocytes (CAA). As adipocytes and cancer cells engage, a metabolic symbiosis ensues that is driven by bi-directional signaling. Many cancers (colon, breast, prostate, lung, ovarian cancer, and hematologic malignancies) stimulate lipolysis in adipocytes, followed by the uptake of fatty acids (FA) from the surrounding adipose tissue. The FA enters the cancer cell through specific fatty acid receptors and binding proteins (e.g., CD36, FATP1) and are used for membrane synthesis, energy metabolism (ฮฒ-oxidation), or lipid-derived cell signaling molecules (derivatives of arachidonic and linolenic acid). Therefore, blocking adipocyte-derived lipid uptake or lipid-associated metabolic pathways in cancer cells, either with a single agent or in combination with standard of care chemotherapy, might prove to be an effective strategy against cancers that grow in lipid-rich tumor microenvironments.
Website Age:
28 years and 1 months (reg. 1997-05-29).

Matching Content Categories {๐Ÿ“š}

  • Health & Fitness
  • Science
  • Education

Content Management System {๐Ÿ“}

What CMS is link.springer.com built with?

Custom-built

No common CMS systems were detected on Link.springer.com, and no known web development framework was identified.

Traffic Estimate {๐Ÿ“ˆ}

What is the average monthly size of link.springer.com audience?

๐ŸŒ  Phenomenal Traffic: 5M - 10M visitors per month


Based on our best estimate, this website will receive around 7,626,932 visitors per month in the current month.

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How Does Link.springer.com Make Money? {๐Ÿ’ธ}

We can't see how the site brings in money.

The purpose of some websites isn't monetary gain; they're meant to inform, educate, or foster collaboration. Everyone has unique reasons for building websites. This could be an example. Link.springer.com might be plotting its profit, but the way they're doing it isn't detectable yet.

Keywords {๐Ÿ”}

pubmed, article, google, scholar, cas, cancer, central, cell, cells, adipose, tissue, fatty, metabolism, nature, acid, journal, ovarian, obesity, research, adipocytes, tumor, macrophages, httpsdoiorgjcmet, httpsdoiorgs, medicine, metastasis, metabolic, breast, resistance, microenvironment, zhang, lengyel, lipid, progression, protein, clinical, human, insulin, adipocyte, oxidation, natural, killer, investigation, inflammation, omental, function, content, mukherjee, promote, stem,

Topics {โœ’๏ธ}

month download article/chapter adipocyte-induced fabp4 expression triple-negative breast cancer obesity-related insulin resistance vivo-expanded nk cells ikk-beta links inflammation targeting metastasis-initiating cells obesity-induced insulin resistance lysosomal-dependent lipid metabolism hematopoietic cell-specific deletion fatty acid oxidation ovarian cancer progression fatty acid transport breast/mammary tumor development lipid-rich tumor microenvironments natural killer cells invasive disease-free survival full article pdf fatty acid network breast cancer invasion adipose tissue niche high-fat-fed mice suppress anti-tumor immunity inflammation-induced formation human glioblastoma cells related subjects link underlying obesity prostate cancer progression local immune response oncogenic signaling lipids metabolic dysfunction drives cancer cells leads cancer cells engage cancer cells incorporate privacy choices/manage cookies adipose tissue macrophages stromal progenitor cells article cancer diet-induced inflammation omental adipose tissue adipocytes support tumorigenesis promotes cancer pathogenesis preclinical models subcutaneous adipose tissue nk-mediated killing bileczย &ย ernst lengyel promote tumor growth human adipose tissue omental immune aggregates article mukherjee

Schema {๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ}

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         headline:The adipocyte microenvironment and cancer
         description:Many epithelial tumors grow in the vicinity of or metastasize to adipose tissue. As tumors develop, crosstalk between adipose tissue and cancer cells leads to changes in adipocyte function and paracrine signaling, promoting a microenvironment that supports tumor growth. Over the last decade, it became clear that tumor cells co-opt adipocytes in the tumor microenvironment, converting them into cancer-associated adipocytes (CAA). As adipocytes and cancer cells engage, a metabolic symbiosis ensues that is driven by bi-directional signaling. Many cancers (colon, breast, prostate, lung, ovarian cancer, and hematologic malignancies) stimulate lipolysis in adipocytes, followed by the uptake of fatty acids (FA) from the surrounding adipose tissue. The FA enters the cancer cell through specific fatty acid receptors and binding proteins (e.g., CD36, FATP1) and are used for membrane synthesis, energy metabolism (ฮฒ-oxidation), or lipid-derived cell signaling molecules (derivatives of arachidonic and linolenic acid). Therefore, blocking adipocyte-derived lipid uptake or lipid-associated metabolic pathways in cancer cells, either with a single agent or in combination with standard of care chemotherapy, might prove to be an effective strategy against cancers that grow in lipid-rich tumor microenvironments.
         datePublished:2022-08-08T00:00:00Z
         dateModified:2022-08-08T00:00:00Z
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      headline:The adipocyte microenvironment and cancer
      description:Many epithelial tumors grow in the vicinity of or metastasize to adipose tissue. As tumors develop, crosstalk between adipose tissue and cancer cells leads to changes in adipocyte function and paracrine signaling, promoting a microenvironment that supports tumor growth. Over the last decade, it became clear that tumor cells co-opt adipocytes in the tumor microenvironment, converting them into cancer-associated adipocytes (CAA). As adipocytes and cancer cells engage, a metabolic symbiosis ensues that is driven by bi-directional signaling. Many cancers (colon, breast, prostate, lung, ovarian cancer, and hematologic malignancies) stimulate lipolysis in adipocytes, followed by the uptake of fatty acids (FA) from the surrounding adipose tissue. The FA enters the cancer cell through specific fatty acid receptors and binding proteins (e.g., CD36, FATP1) and are used for membrane synthesis, energy metabolism (ฮฒ-oxidation), or lipid-derived cell signaling molecules (derivatives of arachidonic and linolenic acid). Therefore, blocking adipocyte-derived lipid uptake or lipid-associated metabolic pathways in cancer cells, either with a single agent or in combination with standard of care chemotherapy, might prove to be an effective strategy against cancers that grow in lipid-rich tumor microenvironments.
      datePublished:2022-08-08T00:00:00Z
      dateModified:2022-08-08T00:00:00Z
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