Autophagy induction for the treatment of cancer

Cancer can be viewed in 2 rather distinct ways, namely (i) as a cell-autonomous disease in which malignant cells have escaped control from cell-intrinsic barriers against proliferation and dissemination or (ii) as a systemic disease that involves failing immune control of aberrant cells. Since macro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Autophagy 2016-10, Vol.12 (10), p.1962-1964
Hauptverfasser: Pietrocola, Federico, Pol, Jonathan, Vacchelli, Erika, Baracco, Elisa E., Levesque, Sarah, Castoldi, Francesca, Maiuri, Maria Chiara, Madeo, Frank, Kroemer, Guido
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container_end_page 1964
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1962
container_title Autophagy
container_volume 12
creator Pietrocola, Federico
Pol, Jonathan
Vacchelli, Erika
Baracco, Elisa E.
Levesque, Sarah
Castoldi, Francesca
Maiuri, Maria Chiara
Madeo, Frank
Kroemer, Guido
description Cancer can be viewed in 2 rather distinct ways, namely (i) as a cell-autonomous disease in which malignant cells have escaped control from cell-intrinsic barriers against proliferation and dissemination or (ii) as a systemic disease that involves failing immune control of aberrant cells. Since macroautophagy/autophagy generally increases the fitness of cells as well as their resistance against endogenous or iatrogenic (i.e., relating to illness due to medical intervention) stress, it has been widely proposed that inhibition of autophagy would constitute a valid strategy for sensitizing cancer cells to chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Colliding with this cell-autonomous vision, however, we found that immunosurveillance against transplantable, carcinogen-induced or genetically engineered cancers can be improved by pharmacologically inducing autophagy with caloric restriction mimetics. This positive effect depends on autophagy induction in cancer cells and is mediated by alterations in extracellular ATP metabolism, namely increased release of immunostimulatory ATP and reduced adenosine-dependent recruitment of immunosuppressive regulatory T cells into the tumor bed. The combination of autophagy inducers and chemotherapeutic agents is particularly efficient in reducing cancer growth through the stimulation of CD8 + T lymphocyte-dependent anticancer immune responses.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/15548627.2016.1214778
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects acetylation
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
Animals
Autophagic Puncta
Autophagy
caloric restriction mimetics
Humans
hydroxycitrate
Immunologic Surveillance
immunosurveillance
Mice
Neoplasms - immunology
Neoplasms - pathology
Neoplasms - therapy
regulatory T cells
spermidine
title Autophagy induction for the treatment of cancer
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