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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Hyaluronan–CD44 interactions as potential targets for cancer therapy

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TLDR
The potential involvement of CD44 variants (CD44v4-v7 and CD44v6-v9) in tumor progression has been confirmed for many tumor types in numerous clinical studies as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
It is becoming increasingly clear that signals generated in tumor microenvironments are crucial to tumor cell behavior, such as survival, progression and metastasis. The establishment of these malignant behaviors requires that tumor cells acquire novel adhesion and migration properties to detach from their original sites and to localize to distant organs. CD44, an adhesion/homing molecule, is a major receptor for the glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan, which is one of the major components of the tumor extracellular matrix. CD44, a multistructural and multifunctional molecule, detects changes in extracellular matrix components, and thus is well positioned to provide appropriate responses to changes in the microenvironment, i.e. engagement in cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions, cell trafficking, lymph node homing and the presentation of growth factors/cytokines/chemokines to co-ordinate signaling events that enable the cell responses that change in the tissue environment. The potential involvement of CD44 variants (CD44v), especially CD44v4-v7 and CD44v6-v9, in tumor progression has been confirmed for many tumor types in numerous clinical studies. The downregulation of the standard CD44 isoform (CD44s) in colon cancer is postulated to result in increased tumorigenicity. CD44v-specific functions could be caused by their higher binding affinity than CD44s for hyaluronan. Alternatively, CD44v-specific functions could be caused by differences in associating molecules, which may bind selectively to the CD44v exon. This minireview summarizes how the interaction between hyaluronan and CD44v can serve as a potential target for cancer therapy, in particular how silencing CD44v can target multiple metastatic tumors.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Extracellular matrix structure.

TL;DR: The complex ECM structure is emphasized as to provide a better understanding of its dynamic structural and functional multipotency and the implication of the various families of ECM macromolecules in health and disease is presented.
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Interactions between Hyaluronan and Its Receptors (CD44, RHAMM) Regulate the Activities of Inflammation and Cancer

TL;DR: The roles of HA interactions with CD44 and RHAMM in inflammatory responses and tumor development/progression are described, and how therapeutic strategies that block these key inflammatory/tumorigenic processes may be developed in rodent and human diseases are described.
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Hyaluronic acid for anticancer drug and nucleic acid delivery.

TL;DR: The rationale underlying approaches, chemical strategies, and recent advances in the use of HA to design drug carriers for delivering anticancer agents, are reviewed and descriptions are given of HA-based drug conjugates, particulate carriers, inorganic nanostructures, and hydrogels.
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Hyaluronic acid targeting of CD44 for cancer therapy: from receptor biology to nanomedicine

TL;DR: This review of CD44 receptor biology and its involvement in the different stages of tumor growth and metastasis, as well as methods currently used for targeting the receptor, outlines a number of research approaches from the current literature that take advantage of hyaluronic acid’s targeting ability.
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Advances in liquid metals for biomedical applications

TL;DR: This tutorial review introduces the common performances of liquid metals, highlights their featured properties, as well as summarizes various state-of-the-art bio-applications involving carriers for drug delivery, molecular imaging, cancer therapy and biomedical devices.
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TL;DR: Cell-adhesion molecules, once believed to function primarily in tethering cells to extracellular ligands, are now recognized as having broader functions in cellular signalling cascades and the CD44 transmembrane glycoprotein family adds new aspects to these roles by participating in signal-transduction processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The peculiarities of tumor cell metabolism are reviewed to discuss the alterations in signal transduction pathways and/or enzymatic machineries that account for metabolic reprogramming of transformed cells.
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