AI Article Synopsis

  • Radiotherapy is a treatment for bladder cancer that can help activate the immune system against cancer cells.
  • Scientists studied how high doses of radiation affect bladder cancer cells and found that it makes them die (apoptosis) and stop growing.
  • The research shows that this radiation not only kills cancer cells but also helps special immune cells (dendritic cells) to get better at fighting the cancer.

Article Abstract

Radiotherapy is a commonly used method in the treatment of bladder cancers (BC). Radiation-induced immunogenic cell death (ICD) is related to the immune response against cancers and their prognoses. Even though dendritic cells (DC) act as powerful antigen-presenting cells in the body, their precise role in this ICD process remains unclear. Accordingly, an in vitro study was undertaken to ascertain whether high-dose radiation-induced ICD of BC cells could regulate the immune response of DC. The results indicated that high-dose radiation treatments of BC cells significantly increased their levels of apoptosis, blocked their cell cycle in the G2/M phase, increased their expression of ICD-related proteins, and upregulated their secretion of CCL5 and CCL21 which control the directed migration of DC. It was also noted that expression of CD80, CD86, CCR5, and CCR7 on DC was upregulated in the medium containing the irradiated cells. In conclusion, the present findings illustrate that high-dose radiation can induce the occurrence of ICD within BC cells, concomitantly resulting in the activation of DC. Such findings could be of great significance in increasing the understanding how radiotherapy of BC may work to bring about reductions in cell activity and how these processes in turn lead to immunoregulation of the function of DC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11373825PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0307024PLOS

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