Englander Institute for Precision Medicine

Immunogenic cell stress and death.

TitleImmunogenic cell stress and death.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsKroemer G, Galassi C, Zitvogel L, Galluzzi L
JournalNat Immunol
Volume23
Issue4
Pagination487-500
Date Published2022 Apr
ISSN1529-2916
KeywordsAdaptive Immunity, Animals, Antigens, Cell Death, Immunogenic Cell Death, Mammals, Neoplasms
Abstract

Dying mammalian cells emit numerous signals that interact with the host to dictate the immunological correlates of cellular stress and death. In the absence of reactive antigenic determinants (which is generally the case for healthy cells), such signals may drive inflammation but cannot engage adaptive immunity. Conversely, when cells exhibit sufficient antigenicity, as in the case of infected or malignant cells, their death can culminate with adaptive immune responses that are executed by cytotoxic T lymphocytes and elicit immunological memory. Suggesting a key role for immunogenic cell death (ICD) in immunosurveillance, both pathogens and cancer cells evolved strategies to prevent the recognition of cell death as immunogenic. Intriguingly, normal cells succumbing to conditions that promote the formation of post-translational neoantigens (for example, oxidative stress) can also drive at least some degree of antigen-specific immunity, pointing to a novel implication of ICD in the etiology of non-infectious, non-malignant disorders linked to autoreactivity.

DOI10.1038/s41590-022-01132-2
Alternate JournalNat Immunol
PubMed ID35145297
PubMed Central ID5864239

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