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Next frontier in tumor immunotherapy: macrophage-mediated immune evasion.

Yingqi QiuTong ChenRong HuRuiyi ZhuChujun LiYingchen RuanXiaoling XieYu-Hua Li
Published in: Biomarker research (2021)
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), at the core of immunosuppressive cells and cytokines networks, play a crucial role in tumor immune evasion. Increasing evidences suggest that potential mechanisms of macrophage-mediated tumor immune escape imply interpretation and breakthrough to bottleneck of current tumor immunotherapy. Therefore, it is pivotal to understand the interactions between macrophages and other immune cells and factors for enhancing existing anti-cancer treatments. In this review, we focus on the specific signaling pathways through which TAMs involve in tumor antigen recognition disorders, recruitment and function of immunosuppressive cells, secretion of immunosuppressive cytokines, crosstalk with immune checkpoints and formation of immune privileged sites. Furthermore, we summarize correlative pre-clinical and clinical studies to provide new ideas for immunotherapy. From our perspective, macrophage-targeted therapy is expected to be the next frontier of cancer immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • adipose tissue
  • signaling pathway
  • cell cycle arrest
  • epithelial mesenchymal transition
  • cell death
  • cell proliferation
  • risk assessment