Platelets and their role in cancer evolution and immune system

Translational Lung Cancer Research
Niki KarachaliouRafael Rosell

Abstract

Platelets are anucleate fragments formed from the cytoplasm of megakaryocytes and represent the smallest circulating hematopoietic cells. Thought for almost a century to possess solely hemostatic potentials, platelets actually play a much wider role in tissue regeneration and repair and interact intimately with tumor cells. On the one hand, tumor cells induce platelet aggregation, known to act as the trigger of cancer-associated thrombosis and on the other hand, platelets recruited to the tumor microenvironment interact directly with tumor cells favoring proliferation, and indirectly through the release of angiogenic and mitogenic proteins. Furthermore, platelets are immunosuppressive cells that protect metastatic cancer cells from surveillance by killer cells, nullifying the effects of immunotherapy.

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