Natural killer cells: tumor surveillance and signaling
Journal Title
Cancers (Basel)
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells play a pivotal role in cancer immunotherapy due to their innate ability to detect and kill tumorigenic cells. The decision to kill is determined by the expression of a myriad of activating and inhibitory receptors on the NK cell surface. Cell-to-cell engagement results in either self-tolerance or a cytotoxic response, governed by a fine balance between the signaling cascades downstream of the activating and inhibitory receptors. To evade a cytotoxic immune response, tumor cells can modulate the surface expression of receptor ligands and additionally, alter the conditions in the tumor microenvironment (TME), tilting the scales toward a suppressed cytotoxic NK response. To fully harness the killing power of NK cells for clinical benefit, we need to understand what defines the threshold for activation and what is required to break tolerance. This review will focus on the intracellular signaling pathways activated or suppressed in NK cells and the roles signaling intermediates play during an NK cytotoxic response.
Publisher
MDPI
Research Division(s)
Inflammation
PubMed ID
32290478
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12040952
NHMRC Grants
NHMRC/1124784
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2020-07-02 01:44:20
Last Modified: 2020-07-02 02:31:37
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