Journal article
The emerging role of immunosurveillance in dictating metastatic spread in breast cancer
CY Slaney, J Rautela, BS Parker
Cancer Research | Published : 2013
Abstract
It is now well known that the immune system can recognize transformed cells and control the initiation and growth of some cancers, a process termed tumor immunosurveillance. Key regulators of this process have been described in the primary tumor setting where the balance of protumor and antitumor responses dictates tumor initiation and progression. Accumulating evidence suggests that immunosurveillance may also be critical for regulating metastatic spread, the most fatal aspect of cancer, and that mechanisms of overcoming immune control may be quite different from those at the primary site. Our recent findings support loss of type I interferon (IFN) signaling as a tumor-cell intrinsic mechan..
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Grants
Awarded by National Breast Cancer Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
The work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC; B.S. Parker) and fellowship support from the National Breast Cancer Foundation and Cure Cancer Australia (C.Y. Slaney).