The Asian Age

Cancer: Immune system can spot and kill tumours

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Los Angeles, July 11: Researcher­s have identified a mechanism that could help determine whether a cancer patient will respond to immunother­apy.

Ideally, the immune system identifies tumours as threatenin­g elements and deploys immune cells ( T cells) to find and kill them, according to the study published in the journal Cell Reports.

However, tumour cells have evolved to employ a protein called PD- L1 to blind T cells from carrying out their functions and evade immune defences.

PD- L1 protects tumour cells by activating a “molecular brake” known as PD- 1 to stop T cells.

In important therapeuti­c progress, antibodies developed to block PDL1/ PD- 1 have been clinically proven to benefit certain cancer patients.

Yet why some patients do not respond to such therapy has remained a mystery.

Now, researcher­s from the University of California San Diego in the US and the Nanjing Medical School in China have uncovered some clues.

They discovered an unexpected twist in the tumour versus T cell battle. Some tumour cells display not only their PDL1 weapon, but also the PD- 1 ‘ brake’.

This simultaneo­us expression leads PD- 1 to bind and neutralise PDL1 on the same tumour cell. Thus, the PD- L1 on these tumour cells can no longer engage the PD- 1 brake on T cells.

“It's a very exciting finding. Our study uncovered an unexpected role of PD1 and another dimension of PD- 1 regulation with important therapeuti­c implicatio­ns," said Enfu Hui from UC San Diego.

This study suggests that patients with high levels of PD- 1 on tumour cells may not respond well to the blocking antibodies because the PD- 1 pathway is self- cancelled.

In these patients, mechanisms other than PDL1/ PD- 1 are likely employed by the tumours to escape from immune destructio­n.

Looking to extend the immunother­apy of the finding, Hui and his colleagues are now seeking to determine additional mechanisms of “self- cancellati­on”.

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