The tumor microenvironment shapes gastric cancer progression by coordinating immune suppression and metabolic reprogramming.
Gastric cancer (GC) remains a leading cause of cancer mortality, largely owing to metastasis driven by a highly dynamic tumor microenvironment (TME).
APA
Jiao F, Wang Z, et al. (2026). The tumor microenvironment shapes gastric cancer progression by coordinating immune suppression and metabolic reprogramming.. Frontiers in immunology, 17, 1787060. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2026.1787060
MLA
Jiao F, et al.. "The tumor microenvironment shapes gastric cancer progression by coordinating immune suppression and metabolic reprogramming.." Frontiers in immunology, vol. 17, 2026, pp. 1787060.
PMID
41890742
Abstract
Gastric cancer (GC) remains a leading cause of cancer mortality, largely owing to metastasis driven by a highly dynamic tumor microenvironment (TME). Immunosuppressive regulatory T cells (Tregs) and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) orchestrate immune evasion through checkpoint signaling and polarization programs, while cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) reshape stromal architecture and promote hypoxia. Concurrently, ECM remodeling-mediated by integrins, growth factors, and matrix metalloproteinases-activates oncogenic pathways such as PI3K/AKT/mTOR, MAPK/ERK, and TGF-β to drive dissemination. Metabolic reprogramming, including glycolysis-derived lactate accumulation, fatty acid and cholesterol dysregulation, and altered amino acid utilization, further constrain antitumor immunity and support angiogenesis and therapeutic resistance. This review summarizes recent advances in the bidirectional crosstalk between GC cells and key TME components, emphasizing how immune remodeling, extracellular matrix (ECM) reprogramming, and metabolic rewiring converge to sustain tumor progression, while highlighting integrative signaling networks linking immune cells, ECM, and metabolites, and providing emerging opportunities for multi-target strategies that disrupt TME-dependent metastasis.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Tumor Microenvironment; Stomach Neoplasms; Disease Progression; Animals; Tumor-Associated Macrophages; Extracellular Matrix; Cellular Reprogramming; Signal Transduction; Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts; Tumor Escape; Metabolic Reprogramming