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The changing role of natural killer cells in cancer metastasis

Isaac S. Chan, Andrew J. Ewald

2022Journal of Clinical Investigation90 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are innate immune cells that are critical to the body's antitumor and antimetastatic defense. As such, novel therapies are being developed to utilize NK cells as part of a next generation of immunotherapies to treat patients with metastatic disease. Therefore, it is essential for us to examine how metastatic cancer cells and NK cells interact with each other throughout the metastatic cascade. In this Review, we highlight the recent body of work that has begun to answer these questions. We explore how the unique biology of cancer cells at each stage of metastasis alters fundamental NK cell biology, including how cancer cells can evade immunosurveillance and co-opt NK cells into cells that promote metastasis. We also discuss the translational potential of this knowledge.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunosurveillanceMetastasisNK-92Cancer cellImmune systemLymphokine-activated killer cellCancerCancer researchImmunologyInnate immune systemMedicineImmunotherapyNatural killer cellBiologyInterleukin 21Natural killer T cellNKG2DInnate lymphoid cellInterleukin 12Cancer immunotherapyCirculating tumor cellJanus kinase 3CellMyeloid-derived Suppressor CellTumor cellsCancer metastasisImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmune cells in cancerCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers
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