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..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers