2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2010.12.001
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CD4+ T Cells Contribute to the Remodeling of the Microenvironment Required for Sustained Tumor Regression upon Oncogene Inactivation

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Cited by 65 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…Seminal findings of Wu et al (11) showed that inactivation of the oncogene MYC in different cancer cell types induces cellular senescence. Later studies demonstrated that CD4 + T cells play a central role in tumor regression upon MYC inactivation and that the secreted cytokine profile of these cells resembles that observed upon Stat3 inactivation (12). Moreover, NK cells are suggested to function as effector cells in tumor lysis in this model.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Seminal findings of Wu et al (11) showed that inactivation of the oncogene MYC in different cancer cell types induces cellular senescence. Later studies demonstrated that CD4 + T cells play a central role in tumor regression upon MYC inactivation and that the secreted cytokine profile of these cells resembles that observed upon Stat3 inactivation (12). Moreover, NK cells are suggested to function as effector cells in tumor lysis in this model.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been shown that oncogene inactivation induces cellular senescence and the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines in diverse tumor types (11,12). Because Stat3 is a signaling node for multiple oncogenic pathways, we wondered whether Stat3 inhibition was associated with cellular senescence.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MYC) during tumor development, have shown that T cells mediate tumor clearance through the killing of both cancer cells and endothelial cells [120,121]. These studies established the importance of T cells in mouse models that mimic targeted therapies, and there are other reports demonstrating the importance of adaptive immune cells using specific targeted therapies.…”
Section: Adaptive Immune Cellsmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…However, this process may be disrupted in pathological conditions. For example, Pten-loss-induced senescence in prostate tumours has been shown to instead generate an immunosuppressive secretome (Toso et al 2014), whilst in other contexts, immune cells have been shown to induce cell senescence in tumour cells (Rakhra et al 2010;Reimann et al 2010;Braumuller et al 2013), a process that likely functions in preventing tumour growth. Therefore, it is important to evaluate whether the senescent secretome in unexplored cell models, particularly in pathological conditions, promotes or inhibits immune surveillance.…”
Section: Cell Cycle Arrestmentioning
confidence: 99%