Cancer-associated fibroblasts as a critical driver in tumor metastasis: The mechanisms and future perspectives
Lingyu Ding, Zhen Li, Jing Yue, Liqing Qiu, Zhifeng Tian, Hongfang Zhang

TL;DR
This review explores how cancer-associated fibroblasts drive tumor metastasis and highlights potential strategies to combat this deadly process.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of CAFs' roles in metastasis and proposes future therapeutic strategies targeting CAFs.
Findings
CAFs are more abundant in metastatic tumors and closely interact with highly metastatic tumor cells.
CAFs contribute to tumor metastasis by degrading the extracellular matrix and promoting pre-metastatic environments.
CAFs influence the organ-specific metastasis of tumor cells through multiple mechanisms like exosomes and immune suppression.
Abstract
Tumor metastasis represents a lethal event for patients due to the lack of effective treatments. Compared with primary tumors, the components of the tumor microenvironment (TME) of metastatic tumors are different. Tumor cells alone are unable to metastasize. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), as one major component of TME, drive tumor metastasis. In metastatic lesions, the proportion of CAFs is significantly higher and is spatially close to tumor cells with high metastatic potential. CAFs themselves are resistant to chemoradiotherapy and have strong invasive ability based on their major role in degrading the extracellular matrix (ECM). Furthermore, CAFs determined the organs to which tumor cells metastasize. By interaction with tumor cells, CAFs were activated, transdifferentiated, and in turn enhanced the invasive ability of tumor cells. Tumor cells also promoted the infiltration of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer Cells and Metastasis · Extracellular vesicles in disease · Immune cells in cancer
