Scientists have discovered a way to stop tumours from shedding certain proteins that the immune system uses to identify and attack tumours.
The new method reduces the spread of melanoma and lung cancer in mice, a new study shows.
Many human cancers exhibit the stress proteins MICA and MICB, which the immune system, particularly natural killer cells, use to identify cells that should be eliminated.
In an act of defiance, cancer cells produce enzymes that cleave these anchored proteins, essentially shedding the proteins and evading detection.
Lucas Ferrari de Andrade et al. suspected that it would be possible to stop tumours from shedding these proteins using antibodies that target the site where MICA and MICB proteins are cleaved.
They studied the effect of such an antibody, mAb 7C6, in mouse models of melanoma and lung cancer, finding that the antibody not only increased the presence of MICA and MICB on cancer cells, but also increased the infiltration of natural killer cells within tumours.
In mice with metastatic melanoma that had spread to the lungs, treatment with mAb 7C6 helped reduce tumour load, the authors report.
In a related Perspective, Adelheid Cerwenka and Lewis Lanier write, "The study introduces an exciting concept for a therapeutic monoclonal antibody with the potential to improve natural killer cell-based cancer immunotherapy."
The World Cancer Declaration recognises that to make major reductions in premature deaths, innovative education and training opportunities for healthcare workers in all disciplines of cancer control need to improve significantly.
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