Journal article
Immunotherapy-induced CD8+ T Cells Instigate Immune Suppression in the Tumor
Abstract
Despite clear evidence of immunogenicity, cancer vaccines only provide a modest clinical benefit. To evaluate the mechanisms that limit tumor regression following vaccination, we have investigated the weak efficacy of a highly immunogenic experimental vaccine using a murine melanoma model. We discovered that the tumor adapts rapidly to the immune attack instigated by tumor-specific CD8+ T cells in the first few days following vaccination, …
Authors
McGray AJR; Hallett R; Bernard D; Swift SL; Zhu Z; Teoderascu F; VanSeggelen H; Hassell JA; Hurwitz AA; Wan Y
Journal
Molecular Therapy, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 206–218
Publisher
Elsevier
Publication Date
1 2014
DOI
10.1038/mt.2013.255
ISSN
1525-0016
Associated Experts
Fields of Research (FoR)
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Adaptive ImmunityAdenoviruses, HumanAnimalsAntigens, NeoplasmCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesCancer VaccinesFemaleGenetic VectorsImmunomodulationImmunotherapyImmunotherapy, AdoptiveInterferon-gammaIntramolecular OxidoreductasesLymphocytes, Tumor-InfiltratingMiceNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalNeoplasmsT-Lymphocyte SubsetsTumor BurdenVaccinationVaccines, Synthetic