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To Fight Cancer, We Must Fight Ourselves

A depiction of cellsThis article, written by Jason Bittel, originally appeared in the winter 2019/20 issue of 51精品视频 Med magazine.

People often think about cancer as though it鈥檚 a foreign assault on the body. An alien growth. An invader that needs to be repelled.听

But this is all wrong, says Dario Vignali, vice chair and professor of immunology at the 51精品视频.听

鈥淭he challenge is because it鈥檚 not foreign. It鈥檚 part of us,鈥 says Vignali, who is also coleader of the cancer immunology program and codirector of the Tumor Microenvironment Center at the UPMC Hillman Cancer Center. 鈥淚t鈥檚 transformed us, but it鈥檚, nonetheless, still us.鈥澛

Interestingly, this is what can make cancer so difficult to combat. Tumors don鈥檛 have a brain, says Vignali, but they do seem to know how our immune system works, and they use that knowledge to slip under the radar, short-circuit our defenses, and even co-opt the cells that should be fighting against them to do their bidding.

In 2019, Vignali and his team published two papers that explain some of the many ways tumors do what they do. But to understand them, you need to first understand a bit about how the immune system functions.

鈥淲e all know that one of the major cell types that can destroy cancer is called a cytotoxic T cell,鈥 says Vignali.听

Also commonly referred to as CD8+ T cells, these battle-bots rove around in our blood looking for things they don鈥檛 like. When they find a target, such as a cell that鈥檚 become infected with a virus, it鈥檚 the CD8+s鈥 job to annihilate it. Cancer cells can also draw the attention of CD8+s; however, the defender鈥檚 search-and-destroy response doesn鈥檛 always go as planned. Often, the CD8+s come screaming into the area, ready for a fight, only to power down like they鈥檝e been hit with a tranquilizer dart.听

Why? Well, it turns out that there鈥檚 another type of T cell known as the regulatory T cell, or Tregs, whose job it is to make sure the CD8+s don鈥檛 get carried away and start attacking things that don鈥檛 need to be attacked. 鈥淭regs are like the conductor of an immunological orchestra,鈥 says Vignali. 鈥淭hey are critical for ensuring that the immune system behaves itself. That it doesn鈥檛 go too wild; that the parties aren鈥檛 too festive.鈥 This helps limit unnecessary tissue damage that leads to autoimmunity or inflammation.听

Scientists have long known that tumors tend to attract Tregs, which cause all the CD8+s that could be fighting the cancer to sort of go to sleep. But what鈥檚 been missing is exactly how these cells communicate. That is, how does one kind of T cell make another kind of T cell turn off?聽

It鈥檚 kind of like getting a car.听It looks great, but you don鈥檛 really know how it works. So if it breaks down, you can鈥檛 fix it.听First we need to understand how it works. Then we can fix it.

Dario Vignali

According to Vignali鈥檚 April study,聽, it all comes down to a couple of messenger molecules known as inhibitory cytokines鈥攕pecifically, cytokines known as IL-10 and IL-35. What鈥檚 more, Vignali has shown that if you take away the Tregs鈥 ability to produce those inhibitory cytokines, as he鈥檚 done in experiments with mice, then the CD8+s can successfully eradicate the tumor.听

In other words, we may be able to help our own bodies fight cancer by inhibiting the inhibitors.听

Of course, there鈥檚 more than one way to skin a Treg. And in another new study, this one聽, Vignali鈥檚 team showed that a similar effect can be achieved by targeting a protein called neuropilin-1.听

Neuropilin-1 鈥減lays a key role in stabilizing regulatory T cells in this very hostile tumor environment,鈥 says Vignali. 鈥淪o we discovered that if we target neuropilin-1, by genetically removing it from a Treg or blocking it with an antibody, now the Tregs collapse, and they don鈥檛 work anymore.鈥澛

And once the Tregs are down, the cytotoxic T cells can get back to work giving the cancer cells the boot.听

All in all, if we鈥檙e going to beat cancer, then we鈥檝e got to get to know our own immune systems at least as well as cancer does.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like getting a car,鈥 says Vignali. 鈥淚t looks great, but you don鈥檛 really know how it works. So if it breaks down, you can鈥檛 fix it.

鈥淔irst we need to understand how it works. Then we can fix it.鈥

Read more articles from 51精品视频 Med Magazine's winter 2019/20 issue.听