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Review

Clinical utilization of chemokines to combat cancer: the double-edged sword

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Pages 267-283 | Published online: 09 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Chemokines are a small group of related chemo-attractant peptides that play an essential role in the homeostatic maintenance of the immune system. They control the recruitment of cells needed for the induction and activation of innate and adaptive immune responses. However, tumors also utilize chemokines to actively progress and evade immunosurveillance. In fact, chemokines are involved directly or indirectly in almost every aspect of tumorigenesis. They mediate survival and metastatic spread of tumors, promote new blood vessel formation (neovascularization) and induce an immunosuppressive microenvironment via recruitment of immunosuppressive cells. As a result, a number of therapeutic strategies have been proposed to target almost every step of the chemokine/chemokine receptor involvement in tumors. Yet, despite occasional success stories, most of them appear to be ineffective or impractical, presumably due to ‘nonspecific’ harm of cells needed for the elimination of tumor escapees and maintenance of immunological memory. The strategy would only be effective if it also promoted antitumor adaptive immune responses capable of combating a residual disease and tumor relapse.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Ana Lustig (NIA) for critical reading of the manuscript and helpful comments and Dolgor Baatar (NIA) for technical help and suggestions. This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging, NIH, USA.

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