Litcius/Paper detail

Immune Circuits to Shape Natural Killer Cells in Cancer

Irene Mattiola

2021Cancers23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphoid cells playing an important role in anti-cancer immunity. NK cells are efficient in controlling the spreading of metastasis but are not very powerful in fighting against primary tumors. The NK cell capability to infiltrate and persist in the tumor microenvironment and to exert their antitumoral functions is often limited by tumor escape mechanisms. These tumor-mediated strategies not only induce NK cell tolerance but also interfere with the NK cell-dependent immune networking. This review will provide an overview of the tumor escape mechanisms impacting NK cells, identify the immune circuits regulating the NK cell-dependent antitumor immunity and revise the emerging therapeutic approaches to unleash NK cells in cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemTumor microenvironmentInnate lymphoid cellLymphokine-activated killer cellNatural killer cellImmunologyBiologyInnate immune systemCancer cellMetastasisImmunityCellCancer researchCancerInterleukin 21T cellCytotoxicityIn vitroBiochemistryGeneticsImmune Cell Function and InteractionIL-33, ST2, and ILC PathwaysImmune cells in cancer