1. Cooperativity of adaptive and innate immunity: implications for cancer therapy.
- Author
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Shanker, Anil and Marincola, Francesco
- Subjects
- *
CANCER immunotherapy , *NATURAL immunity , *T cells , *KILLER cells , *IMMUNE response , *INFLAMMATION , *IMMUNOLOGY - Abstract
The dichotomy of immunology into innate and adaptive immunity has created conceptual barriers in appreciating the intrinsic two-way interaction between immune cells. An emerging body of evidence in various models of immune rejection, including cancer, indicates an indispensable regulation of innate effector functions by adaptive immune cells. This bidirectional cooperativity in innate and adaptive immune functions has broad implications for immune responses in general and for regulating the tumor-associated inflammation that overrides the protective antitumor immunity. Mechanistic understanding of this two-way immune cross-talk could provide insights into novel strategies for designing better immunotherapy approaches against cancer and other diseases that normally defy immune control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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