articleScienceDec 15, 2011Closed access

Autophagy-Dependent Anticancer Immune Responses Induced by Chemotherapeutic Agents in Mice

Université Paris-Sud · Inserm · +10 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Antineoplastic chemotherapies are particularly efficient when they elicit immunogenic cell death, thus provoking an anticancer immune response. Here we demonstrate that autophagy, which is often disabled in cancer, is dispensable for chemotherapy-induced cell death but required for its immunogenicity. In response to chemotherapy, autophagy-competent, but not autophagy-deficient, cancers attracted dendritic cells and T lymphocytes into the tumor bed. Suppression of autophagy inhibited the release of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from dying tumor cells. Conversely, inhibition of extracellular ATP-degrading enzymes increased pericellular ATP in autophagy-deficient tumors, reestablished the recruitment of immune…

No related works found for this paper.