Review Articles in 2023

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  • In this Review, Sato and colleagues provide an overview of the clinicopathological and phenotypical impact of lineage commitment and plasticity during tumorigenesis and progression of human epithelial cancer and discuss the molecular mechanisms that underlie histological lineage transition.

    • Masayuki Fujii
    • Shigeki Sekine
    • Toshiro Sato
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Mempel et al. use our understanding of the physiological response programmes of the immune system to the more commonplace challenges it encounters as a framework to interpret observations of chemokine function in tumours. When viewed in this way, the design of more effective therapeutic interventions leveraging the chemokine system to recalibrate response patterns to cancer might be possible.

    • Thorsten R. Mempel
    • Julia K. Lill
    • Lukas M. Altenburger
    Review Article
  • Numerous immunomodulatory antibodies for cancer treatment have been developed following the discovery of negative regulators of antitumour immunity such as programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA4). The efficacy of these antibodies is determined not only by their ability to block or engage their target but also by their interactions with Fcγ receptors (FcγRs). This Review outlines our current knowledge of these interactions and discusses how we can use this knowledge to generate more effective cancer immunotherapies in the future.

    • Felipe Galvez-Cancino
    • Alexander P. Simpson
    • Sergio A. Quezada
    Review Article
  • Targeting platelets represents a promising approach to improve the therapeutic efficacy of chemotherapy and cancer immunotherapy. Here, Li and colleagues highlight the dynamic role of platelets in tumour development, progression, and response to therapy, and underscore the utility of tumour-educated platelets for precise tumour diagnosis and treatment.

    • Suping Li
    • Zefang Lu
    • Guangjun Nie
    Review Article
  • This Review by Elena B. Pasquale outlines the current understanding of Eph receptor–ephrin signalling mechanisms in cancer progression and therapy resistance, and also details therapeutic strategies for targeting the Eph system as a novel cancer therapy and for improving the efficacy of conventional cancer therapies.

    • Elena B. Pasquale
    Review Article
  • Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) function in opposition to E3 ubiquitin ligases by removing ubiquitin from substrates to control protein and organelle homeostasis and responses to cellular stimuli. In this Review, Dewson et al. describe the many associations of DUBs with the hallmarks of cancer, with a view to identifying those DUBs most likely to impact cancer-associated phenotypes if targeted with selective inhibition.

    • Grant Dewson
    • Pieter J. A. Eichhorn
    • David Komander
    Review Article
  • Although tumour metabolism is well recognized as a key feature in cancer initiation and progression, little is known about metabolic reprogramming in patients. In this Review, Bartman et al. discuss stable-isotope tracing as a means to probe tumour metabolism in vivo and provide an overview of isotope labelling studies performed in patients with cancer.

    • Caroline R. Bartman
    • Brandon Faubert
    • Ralph J. DeBerardinis
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Swietach and colleagues discuss how the pH balance is dysregulated in tumours and how alterations in intracellular and extracellular pH affect tumour biology to accelerate disease progression, providing a rationale for therapeutic targeting of acid–base disturbances in cancer.

    • Pawel Swietach
    • Ebbe Boedtkjer
    • Stine Falsig Pedersen
    Review Article
  • Adrenocortical carcinoma is a rare endocrine cancer with a dismal survival rate and limited therapeutic options. This Review outlines the recent advances that have been made in the understanding of the molecular basis of adrenocortical carcinoma and what this means for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with this cancer type.

    • Chandrayee Ghosh
    • Jiangnan Hu
    • Electron Kebebew
    Review Article
  • T cells can acquire a broad spectrum of differentiation states following activation; certain subtypes of T cells have emerged as key determinants of cancer immunity and response to immunotherapies. Here, Gebhardt, Park and Parish discuss the phenotypic and functional variation of stem-like exhausted CD8+ T cells and memory CD8+ T cells, and how it contributes to their roles in immune escape and cancer outcome.

    • Thomas Gebhardt
    • Simone L. Park
    • Ian A. Parish
    Review Article
  • Transfer RNAs have long been known as static adaptors that translate the genetic code but are now emerging as dynamic regulators in health and disease, including cancer. This Review discusses how the deregulation of the tRNA pool, tRNA-derived small RNAs and tRNA synthetases impacts tumour initiation and progression.

    • Alexandra M. Pinzaru
    • Sohail F. Tavazoie
    Review Article
  • This Review summarizes how the structural details that were revealed by cryo-electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography and insights into molecular basis of polyspecificity and mechanistic studies shaped the understanding of the role of ATP-binding cassette transporter in cancer multidrug resistance, culminating in new therapeutic approaches to sensitize multidrug-resistant cancer cells to conventional and targeted therapies.

    • Andaleeb Sajid
    • Hadiar Rahman
    • Suresh V. Ambudkar
    Review Article
  • Live-cell imaging can provide spatial, morphological and molecular understanding of cancer response to treatment. Here, Alieva et al. review its recent application for uncovering drug mode of action and tumour heterogeneity in response to treatment and discuss its application for next-generation precision medicine.

    • Maria Alieva
    • Amber K. L. Wezenaar
    • Anne C. Rios
    Review Article
  • Sex steroids are major promoters of the growth of breast and prostate cancers. This Review by Poutanen et al. describes the development of treatments for these cancer types that act to restrict sex steroid availability for receptor binding by inhibiting steroid biosynthesis, being a complementary mechanism of action to the more traditional sex steroid antagonists.

    • Matti Poutanen
    • Malin Hagberg Thulin
    • Pirkko Härkönen
    Review Article
  • This Review discusses the impact of steroid-receptor-mediated modifications of long-range chromatin interactions on transcriptional heterogeneity and the initiation, progression and therapy response of hormone-dependent cancers.

    • Theophilus T. Tettey
    • Lorenzo Rinaldi
    • Gordon L. Hager
    Review Article
  • Although selective antagonism of oestrogen receptor signalling in breast cancer has been one of the most successful therapeutic approaches in oncology, resistance is a major clinical challenge. In this Review, Will et al. explore mechanisms of oestrogen-receptor-α-targeted therapeutic resistance and strategies to overcome it.

    • Marie Will
    • Jackson Liang
    • Sarat Chandarlapaty
    Review Article
  • Understanding how cell intrinsic and extrinsic factors combine to initiate transformation holds promise for the development of strategies to prevent, detect and treat cancer early. In this Review, Jassim et al. outline the various theories that have currently been proposed for cancer origins, and the determinants of cancer risk upon which they are based.

    • Amir Jassim
    • Eric P. Rahrmann
    • Richard J. Gilbertson
    Review Article
  • Since the advent of genome-wide association studies, thousands of common alleles have been linked with the risk of cancer. Here, Yang et al. review the development, utility and predictive power of polygenic risk scores and the ongoing debate about their potential for clinical application in cancer.

    • Xin Yang
    • Siddhartha Kar
    • Paul D. P. Pharoah
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Fagin et al. outline the oncogenic drivers of the common endocrine tumours, which derive from thyroid follicular cells, and how these impact tumour phenotypes and disease progression.

    • James A. Fagin
    • Gnana P. Krishnamoorthy
    • Iñigo Landa
    Review Article
  • The role of the microbiota in tumorigenesis has garnered considerable attention over the past two decades. In this Review, El Tekle and Garrett explore the current and evolving understanding of microbiota in cancers of various internal organs, as well as highlighting opportunities for targeting bacteria for cancer prevention, diagnostics and treatment.

    • Geniver El Tekle
    • Wendy S. Garrett
    Review Article