Litcius/Paper detail

Convergent Evolution by Cancer and Viruses in Evading the NKG2D Immune Response

Richard Baugh, Hena Khalique, Leonard W. Seymour

2020Cancers21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

T cell-mediated immune responses. While surface NKG2DL are rarely found on healthy cells, expression is significantly increased in response to various types of cellular stress, viral infection, and tumour cell transformation. In order to evade immune-mediated cytotoxicity, both pathogenic viruses and cancer cells have evolved various mechanisms of subverting immune defences and preventing NKG2DL expression. Comparisons of the mechanisms employed following virus infection or malignant transformation reveal a pattern of converging evolution at many of the key regulatory steps involved in NKG2DL expression and subsequent immune responses. Exploring ways to target these shared steps in virus- and cancer-mediated immune evasion may provide new mechanistic insights and therapeutic opportunities, for example, using oncolytic virotherapy to re-engage the innate immune system towards cancer cells.

Topics & Concepts

Oncolytic virusImmune systemNKG2DBiologyInnate immune systemVirotherapyImmunologyCancer cellCytotoxic T cellVirusCD8CancerVirologyCancer researchGeneticsIn vitroImmune Cell Function and InteractionCAR-T cell therapy researchCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research