Menu
Peptide Database
Results
No peptides found
Featured

Use search to browse all 100+ peptides

IGF-1

Insulin-like Growth Factor 1, Somatomedin C

Quick Stats
Studies 92
Trials 100
Score 2
2025 pubmed

Fueling the Seed: Growth Factors and Cytokines Driving Cancer Stem Cells in Gynecological Malignancies.

Sarcinella. Alessandro A; Guerra Villacis. Juan Sebastian JS; Brizzi. Maria Felice MF

Key Findings

  • IGF‑1 promotes cancer‑stem cell survival and therapy resistance in ovarian, endometrial, and cervical cancers
  • Blocking IGF‑1 signaling reduces cancer‑stem cell numbers and can improve response to chemo‑ and immunotherapy
  • Inflammatory cytokines work together with IGF‑1 to enhance stem‑like traits in tumors

Practical Outcomes

  • If you’re considering IGF‑1 supplementation, be aware it may boost cancer‑stem cell activity in certain gynecologic cancers. Monitoring IGF‑1 levels and limiting exposure could lower potential cancer risk, especially for those with a family history or personal risk factors.

Summary

The paper explains that IGF‑1, a growth‑factor peptide, helps a tiny group of cancer‑stem cells in gynecological tumors grow and resist treatment, and that blocking IGF‑1 signals can shrink these dangerous cells. For people who experiment with IGF‑1 for health or performance, this suggests a possible cancer‑risk side‑effect, especially if you have or are prone to these cancers.

Abstract

Gynecological cancers remain a major global health burden due to their high incidence, molecular heterogeneity, and frequent resistance to conventional therapies. Beyond well-established genetic alterations and targeted treatments, growing attention has been directed toward the role of cancer stem cells (CSCs), a rare tumor subpopulation with self-renewal, differentiation, and tumor-initiating capacities. CSCs are sustained by a specialized microenvironment, the cancer stem cell niche, where growth factors, cytokines, hypoxia, and stromal interactions converge to promote stemness, chemoresistance, and metastatic potential. In breast cancer, signaling axes such as EGFR, IGF, TGFβ, and HGF/c-Met critically regulate CSC expansion, particularly in aggressive subtypes like triple-negative tumors. In ovarian cancer, factors including HGF, VEGFA, IGF, and stromal-derived BMPs drive CSC plasticity and contribute to relapse after platinum therapy. Endometrial CSCs are supported by pathways involving TGFβ, BMP2, and Netrin-4/c-Myc signaling, while in cervical cancer, VEGF, IGF-1, Gremlin-1, and TGFβ-mediated circuits enhance stem-like phenotypes and drug resistance. Cytokine-driven inflammation, especially via IL-3, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, and CCL5, further fosters CSC survival and immune evasion across gynecologic malignancies. Preclinical studies demonstrate that targeting growth factors and cytokine signaling, through monoclonal antibodies, receptor inhibitors, small molecules, or cytokine modulation, can reduce CSC frequency, restore chemosensitivity, and enhance immunotherapy efficacy. This review highlights the interplay between CSCs, growth factors, and cytokines as central to tumor progression and relapses, emphasizing their translational potential as therapeutic targets in precision oncology for gynecological cancers.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-11-26T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ijms262311462

References

253