Cancer immunoediting, the process by which the immune system controls tumour outgrowth and shapes tumour immunogenicity, is comprised of three phases: elimination, equilibrium and escape. Although many immune components that participate in this process are known, its underlying mechanisms remain poorly defined. A central tenet of cancer immunoediting is that T-cell recognition of tumour antigens drives the immunological destruction or sculpting of a developing cancer. However, our current understanding of tumour antigens comes largely from analyses of cancers that develop in immunocompetent hosts and thus may have already been edited. Little is known about the antigens expressed in nascent tumour cells, whether they are sufficient to induce...
Tumor-associated antibodies are frequently detected in cancer patients. To ask whether the recognize...
International audienceAnti-tumor immune responses impede tumor formation, and cancers have evolved m...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2011.This electronic versi...
Cancer immunoediting, the process by which the immune system controls tumour outgrowth and shapes tu...
Accumulated data from animal models and human cancer patients strongly support the concept that immu...
Cancer immunoediting is a process by which immune cells, particularly lymphocytes of the adaptive im...
The immune system interacts with developing cancer in ways that can protect the host against hyperpr...
In a recent issue of Nature, two groups describe the process of cancer immu-noediting whereby an ind...
Cancer immunoediting is a process by which immune cells, particularly lymphocytes of the adaptive im...
Tumor immunology consists of two essential concepts: immune surveillance, which specifies the host i...
Cancer immunosurveillance is the body’s sentinel mechanism of recognizing and eliminating malignancy...
Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby immune cells protect against cancer formation by sculpti...
The prevailing theory of cancer immune surveillance, as understood from carcinogen-driven mouse mode...
Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby immune cells protect against cancer formation by sculpti...
Most chemically induced tumors of mice express unique antigens that can be recognized by cytotoxic T...
Tumor-associated antibodies are frequently detected in cancer patients. To ask whether the recognize...
International audienceAnti-tumor immune responses impede tumor formation, and cancers have evolved m...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2011.This electronic versi...
Cancer immunoediting, the process by which the immune system controls tumour outgrowth and shapes tu...
Accumulated data from animal models and human cancer patients strongly support the concept that immu...
Cancer immunoediting is a process by which immune cells, particularly lymphocytes of the adaptive im...
The immune system interacts with developing cancer in ways that can protect the host against hyperpr...
In a recent issue of Nature, two groups describe the process of cancer immu-noediting whereby an ind...
Cancer immunoediting is a process by which immune cells, particularly lymphocytes of the adaptive im...
Tumor immunology consists of two essential concepts: immune surveillance, which specifies the host i...
Cancer immunosurveillance is the body’s sentinel mechanism of recognizing and eliminating malignancy...
Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby immune cells protect against cancer formation by sculpti...
The prevailing theory of cancer immune surveillance, as understood from carcinogen-driven mouse mode...
Cancer immunoediting is the process whereby immune cells protect against cancer formation by sculpti...
Most chemically induced tumors of mice express unique antigens that can be recognized by cytotoxic T...
Tumor-associated antibodies are frequently detected in cancer patients. To ask whether the recognize...
International audienceAnti-tumor immune responses impede tumor formation, and cancers have evolved m...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, 2011.This electronic versi...