TY - EJOU AU - Feng, Xiangnan AU - Li, Dayong AU - Wang, Pingyu AU - Li, Xinyu AU - Li, Guangyao TI - Lactylation in Cancer: Unlocking the Key to Drug Resistance and Therapeutic Breakthroughs T2 - Oncology Research PY - 2025 VL - 33 IS - 11 SN - 1555-3906 AB - Lactylation, a post-translational modification process that adds lactate groups to lysine residues, plays a crucial role in cancer biology, especially in drug resistance. However, the specific molecular mechanisms of lactylation in cancer progression and drug resistance are still unclear, and therapeutic strategies targeting the lactylation pathway are expected to overcome metabolic reprogramming and immune evasion. Therefore, this article provides a comprehensive description and summary of lactylation modification and tumor drug resistance. Numerous studies have shown that, due to the Warburg effect, there is an abnormally high level of lactate in tumor cells. Elevated levels of lactate promote metabolic reprogramming and alter key cellular processes, including gene expression, DNA repair, and immune regulation. These cellular processes are precisely the key factors for tumor cells to develop drug resistance. Lactylation also affects the tumor microenvironment, promoting immune evasion and resistance to immunotherapy in tumor cells. This modification affects proteins involved in metabolic pathways, glycolysis, and mitochondrial function, further supporting tumor growth and metastasis. Therefore, this article provides a comprehensive description and summary of lactylation modification and tumor drug resistance to clarify the specific mechanisms between the two and provide references and directions for future research on tumor drug resistance. KW - Lactylation; drug resistance; cancer metabolism; tumor microenvironment; immune evasion DO - 10.32604/or.2025.067343