When Cancer Cells Become the Enablers of an Antitumor Immune Response.
Journal
Cancer discovery
ISSN: 2159-8290
Titre abrégé: Cancer Discov
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101561693
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 10 2022
05 10 2022
Historique:
entrez:
5
10
2022
pubmed:
6
10
2022
medline:
7
10
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Tumor-specific cytotoxic T cells unleashed by the blockade of immune checkpoints have to overcome a hostile tumor microenvironment (TME). They start from very small numbers of T cells with tumor antigen specificity and, despite expansion, likely remain at a numerical disadvantage to the tumor cells they target. To overcome these obstacles, we propose that T cells need to change the TME to make it permissive for their antitumor effects by altering the phenotype of cells beyond the cancer cells they are in physical contact with. In this process, IFNγ secreted by tumor-specific T cells plays a critical role, as it changes the expression of hundreds of genes in cancer cells and other immune cells in the TME up to 40 layers of cells away from their location, effectively turning these cells into enablers of the antitumor immune response. In this perspective, we postulate that the clinical activity of cancer immunotherapy with immune-checkpoint blocking antibodies and adoptively transferred T cells requires that cancer cells facilitate the antitumor immune response. IFNγ effectively changes the balance of power in the TME to enable the antitumor activity of tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells.
Identifiants
pubmed: 36196573
pii: 709460
doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-22-0706
doi:
Substances chimiques
Antibodies, Blocking
0
Antigens, Neoplasm
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
2244-2248Informations de copyright
©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.