Inflammation and Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What is inflammation?

A
  • a defensive reaction (innate immune response) against injury caused by trauma, toxic chemicals, or invading pathogens
  • a protective response but also a potentially harmful process - components of inflammation that are capable of destroying microbes can also injure bystander normal tissue
  • if the inflammatory response does not reach a critical threshold of activation, the necessary mechanisms of regulation are not promoted effectively
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2
Q

Which hallmark of cancer does inflammation fall under?

A
  • hallmarks of cancer are acquired functional capabilities that allow cancer cells to survive, proliferate and disseminate
  • this is made possible through the 2 enabling hallmarks, one of which is TUMOUR PROMOTING INFLAMMATION
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3
Q

Which cells are tumours densely infiltrated with?

A
  • they have associated lymphotic infiltrates
  • beneficial immune infiltrate is associated with CD8+ cytotoxic T cells (a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL))
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4
Q

How is anti-tumour immunity mediated?

A
  • mediated primarily by CD8+/CDL cytotoxic cells
  • a dendritic cell phagocytoses a tumour antigen
  • this leads to the activation of tumour antigen specific CD8+ T cells
  • these cells are tumour specific and migrate to the tumour
  • the CTL kills the tumour
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5
Q

How can tumour cells evade the immune response?

A
  1. Failure to produce tumour antigen = if the tumour cell doesn’t produce a cell surface antigen, T cells will not be able to recognise them
  2. Mutation in MHC gene = MHC gene does not mark tumour as a pathogen so T cells don’t recognise them
  3. Tumours secrete immunosuppressive proteins = effects T cells abilities and its activation is inhibited
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