Journal article
Plasticity of type I interferon-mediated responses in cancer therapy: From anti-tumor immunity to resistance
M Budhwani, R Mazzieri, R Dolcetti
Frontiers in Oncology | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2018
Abstract
The efficacy of several therapeutic strategies against cancer, including cytotoxic drugs, radiotherapy, targeted immunotherapies and oncolytic viruses, depend on intact type I interferon (IFN) signaling for the promotion of both direct (tumor cell inhibition) and indirect (anti-tumor immune responses) effects. Malfunctions of this pathway in tumor cells or in immune cells may be responsible for the lack of response or resistance. Although type I IFN signaling is required to trigger anti-tumor immunity, emerging evidence indicates that chronic activation of type I IFN pathway may be involved in mediating resistance to different cancer treatments. The plastic and dynamic features of type I IFN..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by grants from National Health and Medical Research Council (APP1083747 to RM), National Breast Cancer Foundation (IIRS_18_047), Cancer Council Queensland (APP1145758), Brain Tumor Charity (495168), Brain Foundation, Cure Brain Cancer Foundation (to RD and RM).