Leveraging the Immune System during Chemotherapy: Moving Calreticulin to the Cell Surface Converts Apoptotic Death from “Silent” to Immunogenic — Michel Obéid (2007) | RDL Network
Leveraging the Immune System during Chemotherapy: Moving Calreticulin to the Cell Surface Converts Apoptotic Death from “Silent” to Immunogenic
Article 2007 en
Authors
MO
Michel Obéid
TP
Theocharis Panaretakis
AT
Antoine Tesnière
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract In contrast to prior belief, tumor cell apoptosis is not necessarily silent but can be immunogenic. By tracing how anthracyclines and γ-irradiation trigger immunogenic cell deaths, we found that they were causally connected to the exposure of calreticulin on the tumor cell surface, before apoptosis in the tumor cell itself occurred. Furthermore, we showed that calreticulin exposure was necessary and sufficient to increase proimmunogenic killing by other chemotherapies. Our findings suggest that calreticulin could serve as a biomarker to predict therapy-associated immune responses, and that tactics to expose calreticulin might improve the clinical efficacy of many cancer therapies. [Cancer Res 2007;67(17):7941–4]
Michel Obéid, Antoine Tesnière, Theocharis Panaretakis, Roberta Tufi, Nick Joza, Peter Van Endert, François Ghiringhelli, Lionel Apétoh, Nathalie Chaput, Caroline Flament, Evelyn Ullrich, Stéphane de Botton, Laurence Zitvogel, Guido Guido Kroemer
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