脂质体
脂类学
乳腺癌
生物
癌症
脂质代谢
代谢组
肿瘤微环境
疾病
癌症研究
生物信息学
代谢组学
内科学
医学
内分泌学
遗传学
作者
Ashley V. Ward,Steven M. Anderson,Carol A. Sartorius
标识
DOI:10.1007/s10911-021-09505-3
摘要
Abnormal lipid metabolism is common in breast cancer with the three main subtypes, hormone receptor (HR) positive, human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) positive, and triple negative, showing common and distinct lipid dependencies. A growing body of studies identify altered lipid metabolism as impacting breast cancer cell growth and survival, plasticity, drug resistance, and metastasis. Lipids are a class of nonpolar or polar (amphipathic) biomolecules that can be produced in cells via de novo synthesis or acquired from the microenvironment. The three main functions of cellular lipids are as essential components of membranes, signaling molecules, and nutrient storage. The use of mass spectrometry-based lipidomics to analyze the global cellular lipidome has become more prevalent in breast cancer research. In this review, we discuss current lipidomic methodologies, highlight recent breast cancer lipidomic studies and how these findings connect to disease progression and therapeutic development, and the potential use of lipidomics as a diagnostic tool in breast cancer. A better understanding of the breast cancer lipidome and how it changes during drug resistance and tumor progression will allow informed development of diagnostics and novel targeted therapies.
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