Rapamycin-induced M2 macrophage autophagy promotes the migration and invasion of bladder cancer cells via increased IL-10 secretion

  • Yuanyuan Guo
  • Zhong Li
  • Zhenxue Cao
  • Tantu Ma
  • Juan Mei
  • Wei Sun
  • Wuyue Gao
  • Beibei Liu
  • Jianmin Liu
  • Rui Wang
Publication date
September 2021
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Journal
European Journal of Inflammation

Abstract

Intrduction: Rapamycin is an mTOR inhibitor and a prominent inducer of autophagy in cancer cells and tumor interstitial cells. Macrophages are the primary type of immune cells observed in the tumor microenvironment and serve varying roles in the progression of cancer by polarizing into distinct phenotypes. However, whether rapamycin-induced macrophage autophagy influences bladder cancer remains unclear. Methods: THP-1 cells were successfully polarized into M1 or M2 macrophages, which were identified by detecting CD86 (M1) or CD206 (M2) expressions using flow cytometry and measuring M1/M2-related mRNA expressions using reverse transcription-quantitative PCR. Rapamycin was employed for inducing autophagy, and then the influences of enhanced a...

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