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Adjusting the scope of natural killer cells in cancer therapy

Zihen Shen, Xiangpeng Meng, Jai Rautela, Michaël Chopin, Nicholas D. Huntington

2025Cellular and Molecular Immunology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells have evolved to detect abnormalities in tissues arising from infection with pathogens, genomic damage, or transformation and respond rapidly to the production of potent proinflammatory and cytolytic mediators. While this acute proinflammatory response is highly efficient at orchestrating sterilizing immunity to pathogens in a matter of days, cellular transformation often avoids the innate detection mechanisms of NK cells. When cellular transformation results in malignancy, tumor cells and/or the tumor microenvironment can evolve additional mechanisms to circumvent NK cell responses, and cancer is now a dominant disease burden worldwide. Here, we review recent advances in our understanding of the combined relationship between malignancies and natural killer (NK) cells, learn from recent clinical efforts in therapeutically targeting natural killer (NK) cells in cancer and outline some emerging therapeutic concepts that aim to improve the innate immune response against cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Innate immune systemTumor microenvironmentProinflammatory cytokineImmunologyCancerBiologyNatural killer cellImmune systemCancer cellNK-92Cancer researchNatural killer T cellCytotoxic T cellInflammationT cellIn vitroGeneticsBiochemistryImmune Cell Function and InteractionCAR-T cell therapy researchImmune cells in cancer
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