Sweet Surprises: Decoding Tumor-Associated Glycosylation in Cancer Progression and Therapeutic Potential
Eileena F. Giurini, Sam G. Pappas, Kajal H. Gupta

TL;DR
This paper reviews how abnormal sugar structures on cancer cells affect tumor growth and how targeting these sugars could lead to new cancer treatments.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive review of tumor-associated glycosylation's role in cancer progression and highlights novel therapeutic strategies targeting glycans.
Findings
Aberrant glycosylation alters cell surface architecture and signaling, promoting cancer proliferation and metastasis.
Glycan modifications influence immune evasion by altering antigen presentation and immune checkpoint interactions.
Glycan-targeted therapies offer tumor-specific treatment options and can complement existing immunotherapies.
Abstract
Tumor-associated glycosylation is a defining hallmark of cancer, exerting profound effects on multiple aspects of tumor biology. This phenomenon arises from the central role of glycosylation in a wide range of cellular processes and its inherently diverse structural complexity. In cancer cells, aberrant glycosylation often results in the modification of glycoconjugate structures, leading to alterations in cell surface architecture that disrupt cellular homeostasis and signaling pathways. These changes can enhance tumor cell proliferation, invasion, and metastasis by modulating cell adhesion, receptor activation, and intracellular communication. Beyond its direct impact on cancer cells, tumor-associated glycosylation plays a pivotal role in shaping the tumor microenvironment. Aberrant glycan structures influence immune cell infiltration by altering antigen presentation and immune…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlycosylation and Glycoproteins Research · Cancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism · Immune cells in cancer
