Immunology and Biotherapies
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Immunology and Biotherapies
Page Ressources et Actualités du DIU immunologie et biothérapies
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Cancer Immunotherapy Review and Collection
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The Big Tent: Tumor Microenvironment Targets Heat Up – part 2 of an occasional series

The Big Tent: Tumor Microenvironment Targets Heat Up – part 2 of an occasional series | Immunology and Biotherapies | Scoop.it
I recently asked folks for their favorite hot targets in the tumor microenvironment space.

Via Krishan Maggon
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Cancer Immunotherapy Review and Collection
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Mast cells as targets for immunotherapy of solid tumors

Mast cells as targets for immunotherapy of solid tumors | Immunology and Biotherapies | Scoop.it

Highlights

 

Mast cells are found in large numbers at solid tumor sites and can have both pro-tumorigenic and anti-tumorigenic roles.

Multiple pathways, including hypoxia, adenosine, TLR, antibody and complement, can activate mast cells in solid tumors.

Activated mast cells recruit immune effector and regulatory cells and mobilize dendritic cell responses.

Mast cells are excellent targets for cancer immunotherapy due to their location, prolonged lifespan and radio-resistance.

 

Abstract

Mast cells have historically been studied mainly in the context of allergic disease. In recent years, we have come to understand the critical importance of mast cells in tissue remodeling events and their role as sentinel cells in the induction and development of effective immune responses to infection. Studies of the role of mast cells in tumor immunity are more limited. The pro-tumorigenic role of mast cells has been widely reported. However, mast cell infiltration predicts improved prognosis in some cancers, suggesting that their prognostic value may be dependent on other variables. Such factors may include the nature of local mast cell subsets and the various activation stimuli present within the tumor microenvironment. Experimental models have highlighted the importance of mast cells in orchestrating the anti-tumor events that follow immunotherapies that target innate immunity. Mast cells are long-lived tissue resident cells that are abundant around many solid tumors and are radiation resistant making them unique candidates for combined treatment modalities. This review will examine some of the key roles of mast cells in tumor immunity, with a focus on potential immunotherapeutic interventions that harness the sentinel role of mast cells.


Via Krishan Maggon
Krishan Maggon 's curator insight, October 13, 2014 11:46 AM
Molecular Immunology

Volume 63, Issue 1, January 2015, Pages 113–124

Mast cell biology: new functions for an old cell

Review Mast cells as targets for immunotherapy of solid tumors ☆Sharon A. Oldforda, b, Jean S. Marshalla, b, ,   Show moreDOI: 10.1016/j.molimm.2014.02.020Under a Creative Commons DMCC
Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Cancer Immunotherapy Review and Collection
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VentiRx Pharmaceuticals | Innovations in Cancer Immunotherapy

VentiRx Pharmaceuticals | Innovations in Cancer Immunotherapy | Immunology and Biotherapies | Scoop.it
VentiRx is a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company committed to the development and commercialization of novel Toll-like Receptor 8 (TLR8) immunotherapies for the treatment of cancer, respiratory and inflammatory diseases.

Via Krishan Maggon
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Cancer Immunotherapy Review and Collection
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Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines

Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines | Immunology and Biotherapies | Scoop.it

Abstract

Therapeutic cancer vaccines have the potential of being integrated in the therapy of numerous cancer types and stages. The wide spectrum of vaccine platforms and vaccine targets is reviewed along with the potential for development of vaccines to target cancer cell “stemness,” the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) phenotype, and drug-resistant populations. Preclinical and recent clinical studies are now revealing how vaccines can optimally be used with other immune-based therapies such as checkpoint inhibitors, and so-called nonimmune-based therapeutics, radiation, hormonal therapy, and certain small molecule targeted therapies; it is now being revealed that many of these traditional therapies can lyse tumor cells in a manner as to further potentiate the host immune response, alter the phenotype of nonlysed tumor cells to render them more susceptible to T-cell lysis, and/or shift the balance of effector:regulatory cells in a manner to enhance vaccine efficacy. The importance of the tumor microenvironment, the appropriate patient population, and clinical trial endpoints is also discussed in the context of optimizing patient benefit from vaccine-mediated therapy.


Via Krishan Maggon
Krishan Maggon 's curator insight, October 3, 2014 12:08 PM
Advances in Cancer Research

Volume 121, 2014, Pages 67–124

DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-12-800249-0.00002-0

 

 

Therapeutic Cancer VaccinesJeffrey Schlom, , James W. Hodge, Claudia Palena, Kwong-Yok Tsang, Caroline Jochems, John W. Greiner, Benedetto Farsaci, Ravi A. Madan, Christopher R. Heery, James L. Gulley