Role of tumor microenvironment in hematological malignancies

Abstract
The dynamic homeostasis typical of hematopoiesis is orchestrated by the bone marrow microenvironment, along with the hematopoietic system interaction, responding to different stress and damages. In this context, hematological malignant cells reshape the microenvironment to create a cancer-permissive niche, prompting tumor cell survival, proliferation, invasion, angiogenesis, drug resistance, and immune-escape. The latter is also mediated by the metabolic rewire typical of cancer cells, affecting the bone marrow microenvironment. For this reason, the tumor niche represents a bona-fide sanctuary site for malignant cells, due to the secretion of growth factors, pro-angiogenic molecules and direct interactions involving several surface proteins. Unravelling the signaling pathways by which tumor cells corrupt their microenvironment might lead to new opportunities to understand how to target the tumor niche, possibly improving the current therapies with new pharmacological strategies directed toward the eradication of tumor cells.
Keywords
tumor microenvironment
immune escape
mesenchymal stromal cells
multiple myeloma
leukemia
ERC sector(s)
LS Life Sciences
Name supervisor
Cesarina Giallongo
E-mail
cesarina.giallongo@unict.it
Name of Department/Faculty/School
Department of Medical, Surgical Sciences and Advanced Technologies "GF Ingrassia"
Name of the host University
University of Catania (UNICT)
EUNICE partner e-mail of destination Research
eunice@unict.it
Country
Italy
Thesis level
Bachelor
Minimal language knowledge requisite
English B1
Italian B1
Thesis mode
On-site
Length of the research internship
3 months
Financial support available (other than E+)
No