Mast Cells Accumulate in the Stroma of Breast Adenocarcinoma and Secrete Pro-Inflammatory Cytokines and Tumor-Damaging Mediators: Could IL-37 and IL-38 Play an Anti-Tumor Role?
Pio Conti, Carla E. Gallenga, Ciro Annicchiarico, Armando Coppola, Raffaello Pellegrino, Michelangelo J. Conti, Filiberto Mastrangelo

TL;DR
Mast cells in breast cancer tissue may help fight tumors by releasing anti-inflammatory cytokines like IL-37 and IL-38.
Contribution
This paper explores the potential anti-tumor role of IL-37 and IL-38 in mast cell-mediated immunity in breast cancer.
Findings
Mast cells in breast adenocarcinoma stroma secrete both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators.
IL-37 and IL-38 are proposed as potential anti-tumor regulators by counteracting IL-1-driven inflammation.
Mast cells may contribute to tumor suppression by modulating the inflammatory immune response.
Abstract
Tumor tissue is surrounded by mast cells (MCs), which participate in the inflammatory immune response by producing cytokines, proteases, and other molecules. MCs are involved in both innate and acquired immunity and are associated with the IgE response through the FcεRI receptor. MCs mediate inflammation in several immune reactions, including acute hyperreactivity, leukocyte recruitment, acute tissue swelling, anaphylaxis, and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. They not only function as pro-inflammatory effector cells but may also contribute to the regulation of the acquired immune response in tumor tissue. Therefore, MCs may mediate immunity in breast cancer by promoting remodelling and counteracting cancer growth. They also produce anti-inflammatory substances, such as histamine, transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β)1, IL-10, and IL-4, which inhibit the acquired immune response and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMast cells and histamine · Cytokine Signaling Pathways and Interactions · Phagocytosis and Immune Regulation
