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Journal ArticleDOI

Regulatory T cells in tumor immunity

TLDR
Results indicate that cancer vaccines targeting tumor‐associated self‐antigens may potentially expand/activate Tregs and hamper effective antitumor immune responses, and that tumor immunity can therefore be enhanced by depleting T Regs, attenuating Treg suppressive function, or rendering effector T cells refractory to Treg‐mediated suppression.
Abstract
Recent studies have revealed that Foxp3(+)CD25(+)CD4(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs), which are physiologically engaged in the maintenance of immunological self-tolerance, play critical roles for the control of antitumor immune responses. For example, a large number of Foxp3(+)Tregs infiltrate into tumors, and systemic removal of Foxp3(+)Tregs enhances natural as well as vaccine-induced antitumor T-cell responses. Tregs are recruited to tumor tissues via chemokines, such as CCL22 binding to CCR4 expressed by Tregs. They appear to expand and become activated in tumor tissues and in the draining lymph nodes by recognizing tumor-associated antigens as well as normal self-antigen expressed by tumor cells. These results indicate that cancer vaccines targeting tumor-associated self-antigens may potentially expand/activate Tregs and hamper effective antitumor immune responses, and that tumor immunity can therefore be enhanced by depleting Tregs, attenuating Treg suppressive function, or rendering effector T cells refractory to Treg-mediated suppression. Recent attempts have indeed demonstrated that combinations of monoclonal antibodies capable of modulating Treg functions synergistically enhance antitumor activity and are more effective than a single monoclonal antibody therapy. Combination therapy targeting a variety of molecules expressed in antigen-presenting cells, effector T cells and Tregs is envisaged to be a promising anticancer immunotherapy.

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Citations
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BookDOI

Regulatory T Cells

TL;DR: Firm evidence is provided for Foxp3+CD25+CD4+ Treg cells as an indispensable cellular constituent of the normal immune system for establishing and maintaining immunologic self-tolerance and immune homeostasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulatory T cells in cancer immunotherapy

TL;DR: It is hoped that combination of Treg-cell targeting with the activation of tumor-specific effector T cells will make the current cancer immunotherapy more effective.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combining Radiotherapy and Cancer Immunotherapy: A Paradigm Shift

TL;DR: The traditional palliative role of radiotherapy in metastatic disease is evolving into that of a powerful adjuvant for immunotherapy, and opportunities to harness the immune system to extend survival, even among metastatic and heavily pretreated cancer patients are offered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypical and functional specialization of FOXP3 + regulatory T cells

TL;DR: Progress in understanding the diversity of TReg cells, TReg cell function in different anatomical and inflammatory settings, and the influence of the immune environment onTReg cell activity are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

T-cell exhaustion in the tumor microenvironment

TL;DR: The updated understanding on the exhausted T cells in cancer and their potential regulatory mechanisms are overviewed and current therapeutic interventions targeting exhausted T Cells in clinical trials are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Control of Regulatory T Cell Development by the Transcription Factor Foxp3

TL;DR: Foxp3, which encodes a transcription factor that is genetically defective in an autoimmune and inflammatory syndrome in humans and mice, is specifically expressed in naturally arising CD4+ regulatory T cells and retroviral gene transfer of Foxp3 converts naïve T cells toward a regulatory T cell phenotype similar to that of naturally occurring CD4+.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foxp3 programs the development and function of CD4 + CD25 + regulatory T cells

TL;DR: It is reported that the forkhead transcription factor Foxp3 is specifically expressed in CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells and is required for their development and function and ectopic expression ofFoxp3 confers suppressor function on peripheral CD4-CD25− T cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunologic self-tolerance maintained by activated T cells expressing IL-2 receptor alpha-chains (CD25). Breakdown of a single mechanism of self-tolerance causes various autoimmune diseases.

TL;DR: The authors showed that CD4+CD25+ cells contribute to maintaining self-tolerance by downregulating immune response to self and non-self Ags in an Ag-nonspecific manner, presumably at the T cell activation stage.
Journal ArticleDOI

A CD4 + T-cell subset inhibits antigen-specific T-cell responses and prevents colitis

TL;DR: It is shown that chronic activation of both human and murine CD4+T cells in the presence of interleukin (IL)-10 gives rise to CD4-T-cell clones with low proliferative capacity, producing high levels ofIL-10, low levels of IL-2 and no IL-4.
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