Immunisation par les chimiothérapies anticancéreuses: Le point en 2012

Laurence Zitvogel, Dalil Hannani, Laetitia Aymeric, Oliver Kepp, Isabelle Martins, Guido Kroemer

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    4 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Most anticancer agents are thought to act through direct induction of tumoral, stromal and endothelial cell death by apoptosis or necrosis. In a 2008 issue of Bulletin de l'Académie Nationale de Médecine, we described an alternative (or complementary) theory whereby the immune System participates in the antitumoral effects of some chemotherapy or radiotherapy regimens by promoting an immunogenic cell death pathway. In particular, we showed the critical importance of two pre-mortem stressors that determine the immunogenicity of dying tumor cells. The first, an ER stress response culminating in calreticuline exposure at the tumor cell surface, is mandatory for the uptake and efficient phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies by dendritic cells. In the second, autophagy leads to the release of A TP by dying tumor cells, resulting in the recruitment of inflammatory phagocytes and antigenpresenting cells, and also triggering the inflammasome that causes IL-1β release and CD8+ T cell polarization. The tumor microenvironment changes following chemotherapy, favoring sequential accumulation of a series of innate and cognate effectors that act in a coordinated fashion to promote tumor eradication. These findings will help to identify immune predictors of the response to conventional anticancer treatments and to design innovative combinatorial immunochemotherapy regimens.

    Titre traduit de la contributionAntitumoral immunization during cancer chemotherapy
    langue originaleFrançais
    Pages (de - à)1075-1086
    Nombre de pages12
    journalBulletin de l'Academie Nationale de Medecine
    Volume196
    Numéro de publication6
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 janv. 2012

    mots-clés

    • Apoptosis
    • Chemotherapy
    • Dendritic cells
    • Innate immunity

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