Immunoregulatory roles of post-translational modifications in colorectal cancer: mechanisms and therapeutic implications
Xinyue Liang, Jinhong Yao, Wenbo Jiao, Xiaolin Li, Bo Yang, Hongqiong Fan

TL;DR
This review explores how protein modifications affect immune responses in colorectal cancer and how targeting them could improve immunotherapy.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of PTM roles in CRC immunology and highlights novel therapeutic strategies.
Findings
PTMs influence antigen presentation and immune cell behavior in the tumor microenvironment.
Modifications regulate T cell exhaustion and macrophage polarization, affecting immunotherapy outcomes.
PTM-targeted strategies show promise in overcoming resistance to immune checkpoint blockade.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains a leading cause of cancer morbidity and mortality worldwide, with tumor immune evasion posing a major challenge to effective immunotherapy. Post-translational modifications (PTMs), including phosphorylation, ubiquitination, acetylation, methylation, and glycosylation, are critical regulators of protein function and stability, profoundly influencing tumor immunogenicity and the tumor immune microenvironment. This review comprehensively examines how PTMs modulate key immune processes in CRC, such as antigen presentation, immune cell infiltration, and immune checkpoint regulation. We discuss PTM-mediated mechanisms that shape T cell exhaustion, macrophage polarization, and immunosuppressive cytokine networks within the tumor microenvironment. Moreover, we highlight the impact of PTMs on therapeutic response and resistance to immune checkpoint blockade and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImmune cells in cancer · Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers · Epigenetics and DNA Methylation
