Tumor immunology - When a cancer cell meets the immune cells
Journal
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Journal Volume
98
Journal Issue
11
Pages
730-735
Date Issued
1999
Author(s)
Abstract
Tumor immunology consists of two essential concepts: immune surveillance, which specifies the host immune reactions against tumor cells, and tumor immune escape, which refers to the tumor-cell evasion process against the host immune system. Effective antitumor immunity by the host immune surveillance is supposed to be dependent on the identification of tumor antigens. In the process of malignant transformation, genetic mutations with aberrant expression of cancer-related genes and protein products are potentially immunogenic, which may serve as rejection antigens. Several scenarios are proposed to be responsible for tumor immune-escape mechanisms. The elucidation of the immune deficit against cancer progression has been a difficult task and no solitary mechanism explains the complicated cancer-host immune interactions. Cancer cells may overcome immune surveillance through a common but effective pathway, either by changing the polarity of effector cells, thus down-regulating the proliferation of tumor-specific cytotoxic T cells, or altering the effector compositions of immune cells within the tumor milieu, or both. Understanding the interaction between cancer cells and host immune cells within the tumor milieu is of importance for further clinical applications of immunotherapy in cancer treatment.
SDGs
Other Subjects
tumor antigen; antigen expression; cancer cell; cytotoxic T lymphocyte; effector cell; gene mutation; human; human cell; immune response; immunocompetent cell; immunosurveillance; malignant transformation; receptor down regulation; review; task performance; tumor immunology; Antigens, Neoplasm; Cytokines; Histocompatibility Antigens Class I; Histocompatibility Antigens Class II; Humans; Immune Tolerance; Killer Cells, Natural; Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating; Neoplasms
Type
review article
