Myeloid suppressor cells in cancer: recruitment, phenotype, properties, and mechanisms of immune suppression

P Serafini, I Borrello, V Bronte - Seminars in cancer biology, 2006 - Elsevier
P Serafini, I Borrello, V Bronte
Seminars in cancer biology, 2006Elsevier
Growing tumors acquire the ability to resist immune recognition and immune-mediated
injury. Among several mechanisms, mouse and human tumors share the ability to alter the
normal hematopoiesis, leading to accumulation of cells of the myelo-monoctytic lineage at
the tumor site and in different primary and secondary lymphoid organs. These cells aid
tumor development by providing molecules and factors essential for tumor growth and
neovascularization but also exert a profound inhibitory activity on both tumor-specific and …
Growing tumors acquire the ability to resist immune recognition and immune-mediated injury. Among several mechanisms, mouse and human tumors share the ability to alter the normal hematopoiesis, leading to accumulation of cells of the myelo-monoctytic lineage at the tumor site and in different primary and secondary lymphoid organs. These cells aid tumor development by providing molecules and factors essential for tumor growth and neovascularization but also exert a profound inhibitory activity on both tumor-specific and nonspecific T lymphocytes. The present article summarizes recent findings on the interaction between developing cancers and these recently described “myeloid suppressor cells”.
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