Literature DB >> 11926408

Immunodominance and tumor escape.

H Schreiber1, T H Wu, J Nachman, W M Kast.   

Abstract

Cancers in mouse and man express multiple tumor-specific as well as tumor-associated antigens. Immunodominance in the host response to these antigens can result in successive selection of heritable antigen loss variants. Immunodominance may also prevent the development of responses to new tumor-specific antigens that may arise during tumor progression. Some tumor-specific antigens are retained during tumor progression possibly because they are essential for survival of the malignant phenotype. Immunodominance may allow cancer cells to escape even after loss of a single MHC Class I allele because cross-presentation of the retained antigen by this allele that must be expressed on the surrounding antigen presenting cells sustains the immunodominant response. This prevents effective responses to secondary antigens that may remain as potential targets. Immunization with in vitro selected cancer cell variants that lack the immunodominant antigen can break the immunodominance and prevent escape of cancers from host immunity.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11926408     DOI: 10.1006/scbi.2001.0401

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Cancer Biol        ISSN: 1044-579X            Impact factor:   15.707


  25 in total

Review 1.  Hitting the Target: How T Cells Detect and Eliminate Tumors.

Authors:  Anthony E Zamora; Jeremy Chase Crawford; Paul G Thomas
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2018-01-15       Impact factor: 5.422

Review 2.  Dendritic cells in melanoma immunotherapy.

Authors:  Mark B Faries; Brian J Czerniecki
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2005-05

3.  Sculpting the immunological response to dengue fever by polytopic vaccination.

Authors:  Hao Zhou; Michael W Deem
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2005-12-28       Impact factor: 3.641

Review 4.  Adoptive immunotherapy for cancer: building on success.

Authors:  Luca Gattinoni; Daniel J Powell; Steven A Rosenberg; Nicholas P Restifo
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 53.106

5.  Suppression of proximal T cell receptor signaling and lytic function in CD8+ tumor-infiltrating T cells.

Authors:  Ngozi Monu; Alan B Frey
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2007-12-01       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Radiotherapy suppressed tumor-specific recruitment of regulator T cells via up-regulating microR-545 in Lewis lung carcinoma cells.

Authors:  Chen Liao; Wei Xiao; Nuo Zhu; Zhiyuan Liu; Jiu Yang; Yanhu Wang; Mei Hong
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Pathol       Date:  2015-03-01

Review 7.  Natural selection of tumor variants in the generation of "tumor escape" phenotypes.

Authors:  Hung T Khong; Nicholas P Restifo
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 25.606

8.  CD8+ T cells specific for the androgen receptor are common in patients with prostate cancer and are able to lyse prostate tumor cells.

Authors:  Brian M Olson; Douglas G McNeel
Journal:  Cancer Immunol Immunother       Date:  2011-02-25       Impact factor: 6.968

9.  B7-H1 maintains the polyclonal T cell response by protecting dendritic cells from cytotoxic T lymphocyte destruction.

Authors:  Ling Chen; Takeshi Azuma; Weiwei Yu; Xu Zheng; Liqun Luo; Lieping Chen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-03-05       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Expression of LIGHT/TNFSF14 combined with vaccination against human papillomavirus Type 16 E7 induces significant tumor regression.

Authors:  Shreya Kanodia; Diane M Da Silva; Tigran Karamanukyan; Lies Bogaert; Yang-Xin Fu; W Martin Kast
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2010-05-11       Impact factor: 12.701

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.