CD4 T-cell subsets and tumor immunity: the helpful and the not-so-helpful

HJ Kim, H Cantor - Cancer immunology research, 2014 - AACR
Cancer immunology research, 2014AACR
Research over the past decade has revealed the increasingly complex biologic features of
the CD4+ T-cell lineage. This T-cell subset, which was originally defined on the basis of
helper activity in antibody responses, expresses receptors that recognize peptides that have
been processed and presented by specialized antigen-presenting cells. At the core of the
adaptive immune response, CD4 T cells display a large degree of plasticity and the ability to
differentiate into multiple sublineages in response to developmental and environmental …
Abstract
Research over the past decade has revealed the increasingly complex biologic features of the CD4+ T-cell lineage. This T-cell subset, which was originally defined on the basis of helper activity in antibody responses, expresses receptors that recognize peptides that have been processed and presented by specialized antigen-presenting cells. At the core of the adaptive immune response, CD4 T cells display a large degree of plasticity and the ability to differentiate into multiple sublineages in response to developmental and environmental cues. These differentiated sublineages can orchestrate a broad range of effector activities during the initiation, expansion, and memory phase of an immune response. The contribution of CD4 cells to host defense against pathogenic invasion and regulation of autoimmunity is now well established. Emerging evidence suggests that CD4 cells also actively participate in shaping antitumor immunity. Here, we outline the biologic properties of CD4 T-cell subsets with an emphasis on their contribution to the antitumor response. Cancer Immunol Res; 2(2); 91–98. ©2014 AACR.
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