Genomic destabilizers, such as radiation and chemotherapy, and epigenetic modifiers are used for the treatment of cancer due to their apoptotic effects on the aberrant cells. However, these therapies may also induce widespread changes within the immune system and cancer cells, which may enable tumors to avoid immune surveillance and escape from host anti-tumor immunity. Genomic destabilizers can induce immunogenic death of tumor cells, but also induce upregulation of immune inhibitory ligands on drug-resistant cells, resulting in tumor progression. While administration of immunomodulatory antibodies that block the interactions between inhibitory receptors on immune cells and their ligands on tumor cells can mediate cancer regression in a su...
Recently, immunotherapeutic approaches have shown impressive responses in a subset of cancer patient...
The critical role of dysregulated epigenetic pathways in cancer genesis, development, and therapy ha...
The DNA damage response (DDR) maintains the stability of a genome faced with genotoxic insults (exog...
Genomic destabilizers, such as radiation and chemotherapy, and epigenetic modifiers are used for the...
Continuously improving knowledge of the fine mechanisms regulating cross-talk between immune cells, ...
Epigenetic mechanisms are processes that affect gene expression and cellular functions without invol...
The efficacy of cancer immunotherapy relies on the ability of the host immune system to recognise th...
Immune surveillance should be directed to suppress tumor development and progression, involving a ba...
Cancer cells are under the surveillance of the host immune system. Nevertheless, a number of immunos...
A balance between co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory signals in the tumor microenvironment (TME) is cr...
Genome instability and immune evasion are both defining hallmarks of cancer. Tumorigenesis is freque...
Immunotherapy has brought new hope for cancer patients in recent times. However, despite the promisi...
Epigenetic changes such as promoter specific DNA hypermethylation and histone deacetylation cause tu...
Epigenetic regulation allows heritably modulating gene expression profiles without modifying the pri...
DNA methylation regulates gene expression in normal cells. This epigenetic mechanism acts in at leas...
Recently, immunotherapeutic approaches have shown impressive responses in a subset of cancer patient...
The critical role of dysregulated epigenetic pathways in cancer genesis, development, and therapy ha...
The DNA damage response (DDR) maintains the stability of a genome faced with genotoxic insults (exog...
Genomic destabilizers, such as radiation and chemotherapy, and epigenetic modifiers are used for the...
Continuously improving knowledge of the fine mechanisms regulating cross-talk between immune cells, ...
Epigenetic mechanisms are processes that affect gene expression and cellular functions without invol...
The efficacy of cancer immunotherapy relies on the ability of the host immune system to recognise th...
Immune surveillance should be directed to suppress tumor development and progression, involving a ba...
Cancer cells are under the surveillance of the host immune system. Nevertheless, a number of immunos...
A balance between co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory signals in the tumor microenvironment (TME) is cr...
Genome instability and immune evasion are both defining hallmarks of cancer. Tumorigenesis is freque...
Immunotherapy has brought new hope for cancer patients in recent times. However, despite the promisi...
Epigenetic changes such as promoter specific DNA hypermethylation and histone deacetylation cause tu...
Epigenetic regulation allows heritably modulating gene expression profiles without modifying the pri...
DNA methylation regulates gene expression in normal cells. This epigenetic mechanism acts in at leas...
Recently, immunotherapeutic approaches have shown impressive responses in a subset of cancer patient...
The critical role of dysregulated epigenetic pathways in cancer genesis, development, and therapy ha...
The DNA damage response (DDR) maintains the stability of a genome faced with genotoxic insults (exog...