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Anticancer Drugs at Low Concentrations Upregulate the Activity of Natural Killer Cell

  • Hyeokjin Kwon (Department of Clinical Laboratory Science, College of Health Sciences, Catholic University of Pusan) ;
  • Myeongguk Jeong (Department of Clinical Laboratory Science, College of Health Sciences, Catholic University of Pusan) ;
  • Yeeun Kim (Department of Clinical Laboratory Science, College of Health Sciences, Catholic University of Pusan) ;
  • Go-Eun Choi (Department of Clinical Laboratory Science, College of Health Sciences, Catholic University of Pusan)
  • Received : 2023.08.22
  • Accepted : 2023.09.13
  • Published : 2023.09.30

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are innate cytotoxic lymphoid cells that actively prevent neoplastic development, growth, and metastatic dissemination in a process called cancer immunosurveillance. Regulation of the cytotoxic activity of NK cells relies on integrated interactions between inhibitory receptors and numerous activating receptors that act in tandem to eliminate tumor cells efficiently. Conventional chemotherapy is designed to produce an anti-proliferative or cytotoxic effect on early tumor cell division. Therapies designed to kill cancer cells and simultaneously maintain host anti-tumor immunity are attractive strategies for controlling tumor growth. Depending on the drug and dose used, several chemotherapeutic agents cause DNA damage and cancer cell death through apoptosis, immunogenic cell death, or other forms of non-killing (i.e., mitotic catastrophe, senescence, autophagy). Among stress-induced immunostimulatory proteins, changes in the expression levels of NK cell activating and inhibitory ligands and tumor cell death receptors play an important role in the detection and elimination by innate immune effectors including NK cells. Therefore, we will address how these cytotoxic lymphocytes sense and respond to high and low concentrations of drug-induced stress to the drug cisplatin, among the various types of drugs that contribute to their anticancer activity.

Keywords

Acknowledgement

This study was supported by academic research funds from the Catholic University of Pusan in 2021.

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