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Transforming the Dark into Light: A Siglec-9 Switch.

Hinrich Abken
Published in: Cancer immunology research (2024)
Tumor-associated immune repression dampens the success of T-cell therapy for cancer by a plethora of inhibitory mechanisms including aberrant glycosylation. In this issue, Eisenberg and colleagues show that IFNγ induces hyper-sialylation of cancer cells and that this acts as the "checkpoint" through binding to the inhibitory molecule Siglec-9 on immune cells. A chimeric Siglec-9 "switch" receptor converts the suppressive signal into a stimulatory signal, thereby restoring T-cell responses in the tumor tissue, which has multiple implications for the use of adoptive cell therapy in cancer. See related article by Eisenberg et al., p. XX (3).
Keyphrases
  • cell therapy
  • papillary thyroid
  • stem cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • squamous cell
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • dendritic cells
  • cell cycle
  • oxidative stress
  • cell proliferation
  • bone marrow