Mechanistic role of pyroptosis in tumor microenvironment and tumor immunotherapy

Role of pyroptosis in cancer inhibition

Authors

  • Rukset Attar Yeditepe University
  • Muhammad Zahid Qureshi Deanship of Educational Services, Department of Biochemistry, Qassim University, Al Qassim, Buraidah 51452, Saudi Arabia.
  • Uteuliyev Yerzhan Sabitaliyevich Scientific Center for Innovative Technologies and Research, Kazakhstan
  • Ishmuratova Margarita Yulaevna E. A. Buketov Karaganda University, Kazakhstan
  • Mirna Azalea Romero Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, Laboratorio de Investigación Clínica, Av. Solidaridad S/N, Colonia Hornos Insurgentes, cp 39300, Acapulco, Guerrero México

Keywords:

Cancer, Pyroptosis, Cell Signaling, metastasis, PD-L1/PD-1 signaling

Abstract

In recent decades, extraordinary attention has been devoted to cell death pathways principally because of multifaceted regulatory roles in normal developmental and pathophysiological processes. The removal of functionally defective, infected or potentially malignant cells is regulated by programmed cell death (PCD) cascades.  Pyroptotic cell death is a highly complicated pro-inflammatory form of cell death. Pyroptosis is characterized by the formation of pores in the plasma membrane by oligomerization of the N-terminal fragment of gasdermins (gasdermin-NT) following the cleavage of gasdermin. Pyroptosis plays a pivotal role in the innate immune responses and mechanistically steered by inflammasome-mediated and inflammasome-independent cascades. In this review, we have comprehensively analyzed how different signaling pathways regulated pyroptosis in cancer inhibition and metastatic spread of cancer cells to the secondary sites. Comprehensive understanding of the interconnection between signaling pathways and pyroptosis will enable us to reap maximum benefits from the exciting mechanistic insights gained from pioneering studies related to pyroptosis.

Published

2024-06-06

Issue

Section

Mini Reviews