Cancer Weekly
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Immunotherapy
Research on immunotherapy reported by scientists at National Institutes of Health
February 10th, 2009
"Tumor suppressor p53 is reported to be an attractive immunotherapy target because it is mutated in approximately half of human cancers, resulting in inactivation and often an accumulation of the protein in the tumor cells. Only low amounts of protein are detectable in normal tissues," scientists in the United States report. "The differential display of antigen in normal versus tumor tissues has been reported to create an opportunity to target p53 by immunotherapy. We sought to determine the relationship between p53 expression and its recognition by cognate T cells in human tumors including common epithelial malignancies. Inasmuch as nonsense or missense p53 mutations...
Source: Cancer Weekly (2009-02-10)
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