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The molecular basis of immuno-radiotherapy

Ioannis M. Koukourakis, Dina Tiniakos, Vassilis Kouloulias, Anna Zygogianni

2022International Journal of Radiation Biology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: Radiotherapy (RT) and immunotherapy are powerful anti-tumor treatment modalities. Experimental research has demonstrated an important interplay between the cytotoxic effects of RT and the immune system. This systematic review provides an overview of the basics of anti-tumor immunity and focuses on the mechanisms underlying the interplay between RT and immune anti-tumor response that set the molecular basis of immuno-RT. CONCLUSIONS: An 'immunity acquired equilibrium' mimicking tumor dormancy can be achieved post-irradiation treatment, with the balance shifted toward tumor eradication or regrowth when immune cells' cytotoxic effects or cancer proliferation rate prevail, respectively. RT has both immunosuppressive and immune-enhancing properties. The latter effect is also known as radio-vaccination. Its mechanisms involve up- or down-regulation of membrane molecules, such as PD-L1, HLA-class-I, CD80/86, CD47, and Fas/CD95, that play a vital role in immune checkpoint pathways and increased cytokine expression (e.g. INFα,β,γ, IL1,2, and TNFα) by cancer or immune cells. Moreover, the interactions of radiation with the tumor microenvironment (fibroblasts, tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, monocytes, and dendritic cells are also an important component of radio-vaccination. Thus, RT may have anti-tumor vaccine properties, whose sequels can be exploited by immunotherapy agents to treat different cancer subtypes effectively.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemImmunotherapyCancer researchImmunologyTumor microenvironmentCytotoxic T cellImmune checkpointCancer vaccineImmunityCancerCD80Cancer immunotherapyBiologyMedicineCD40Internal medicineIn vitroBiochemistryImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersImmune Cell Function and Interaction
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