Emily Hodgson Hallmarks of Cancer Immunology Drugs Metastasis.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Leicester Warwick Medical School Neoplasia II Invasion, Metastasis and Effects of Tumours Professor Rosemary A Walker Department of Pathology.
Advertisements

Chapter 43 Notes The Body’s Defenses. Nonspecific Defenses Against Infection The skin and mucous membranes provide first-line barriers to infection -skin.
Cancer: Metastasis By Joshua Bower and Asfand Baig Peer Support 2013/2014.
Cancer metastasis Clara Farque
Evading Immune Responses and Tumor Immunology
Immunity Chapter 40 Section 2. Lymphatic System.
Immune System Chapter 14.
The Immune System Specific Immunity. What You Should Know Immune surveillance A range of white blood cells constantly circulate monitoring the tissues.
The Immune System 1.The Innate System 2.The Adaptive System.
I.Nonspecific defences A.Species resistance B. Mechanical barriers (skin, mucous membranes, sweat, sloughing epidermis) form the first line of defense.
Defenses Against Infection 1. Innate responses (humoral and cellular) 2. Immunity to intracellular pathogens NK cells, control of Th1/Th2 responses 3.
Principles of Immunology T Cell-Mediated Immunity 3/28/06 “Each of us needs to be the change we wish to see in the world” Ghandi.
The Immune system Role: protect body against pathogens
Immunity : The Immune system plays a role in combating infection, creating inflammation (& consequently heart disease), controlling (or not) cancer and.
Peer Support: Francesca Peters + Reesha Ranat. A system of biological structures and process that exits to protect against disease Can be divided based.
Immunity Innate and Adaptive Immunity Cells of the Immune System
Neoplasms.
Immune System Chapter 43. Slide 2 of 39 2 Types of Immunity  2 major kinds of defenses have evolved to counter threats of viruses, bacteria, & other.
Body’s Defenses. Passive Formation of antibodies To the fetus thru the placenta, thru breast milk, thru administration of plasma (artificial) Active.
SC430 Molecular Cell Biology
Specific Cellular Defence.  Range of white blood cells (WBCs) circulate monitoring for damage, pathogens or cancerous cells  In response to damage or.
PALOMAR COLLEGE Biology 201 Fundamentals of Biology II Rob Mustard Adjunct Faculty.
Specific Resistance = Immunity
Immune System (immunus = to be free) primary defense against disease- causing organisms.
cure for cancer (revision)
The Body’s Defenses By: Ah Young Byun and Kaja Kasperova.
Characteristics of Cancer. Promotion (reversible) Initiation (irreversible) malignant metastases More mutations Progression (irreversible)
Bellwork Discuss with your group what you think is happening in the following processes. Why does your body undergo an allergic reaction? Why do some.
White Blood Cells Prepared by Dr. Hamad ALAssaf
The immune response White Blood cell types. Myeloid stem cells Lymphoid cells Pluripotent stem cells (in bone marrow) Monocyte Mast cells Basophils Neutrophils.
IMMUNE SYSTEM OVERVIEW
Elsevier items and derived items © 2008 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Some material was previously published. Biology of Cancer and Tumor.
T-LYMPHOCYTE 1 Lecture 8 Dr. Zahoor. Objectives T-cell Function – Cells mediated immunity Type of T-cells 1. Cytotoxic T-cell – CD8 (Killer T-cell) 2.
18 Animal Defense Systems Animal defense systems are based on the distinction between self and nonself. There are two general types of defense mechanisms:
12 Immune Response to Biomaterials CHAPTER
MICR 304 Immunology & Serology Lecture 6 NK Cells, Lymphocytes Chapter 1.4 –1.17; 2.30 – 2.33 Lecture 6 NK Cells, Lymphocytes Chapter 1.4 –1.17; 2.30 –
Chapter 6 Adaptive Immunity “third line of defense”  Develops more slowly  Specific  Memory.
___________DEFENSES of the HOST: THE IMMUNE RESPONSE
Innate Immunity Present before exposure to pathogens Present at birth Non-antigen specific Consists of: – Skin… barrier for microbes and viruses Compromised.
Immune System Chapter 43. Types of Invaders _________: a bacterium, fungus, virus, or other disease causing agent  Antigen: any foreign molecule or protein.
Ch 31 immune system AP lecture hill.com/sites/ /student_view0/ch apter22/animation__the_immune_response.h tml
Cells and Organs1 Components of the Immune System Learn on your own: Spleen structure and function Mast cells and NK cells Self-Test Questions: A1: allC1:
2nd Year Medicine- IBLS Module May 2008 IBLS Lecture 11 White Blood Cells (Leucocytes)
 Involves specificity & memory, increases effectiveness with each exposure to an antigen  Antigens: Substances that stiumulate adaptive immunity responses.
NAJRAN UNIVERSITY College of Medicine NAJRAN UNIVERSITY College of Medicine Microbiology &Immunology Course Lecture No. 15 Microbiology &Immunology Course.
Major Events in the Local Inflammatory Response.
Ch 43 The Body’s Defense. Three lines of Defense: 1. External defenses 2. Internal (phagocytes, inflammation) 3. Specific defense: (lymphocytes) 1 & 2.
Lecture 7 Immunology Cells of adaptive immunity
 Drainage system: transports proteins and fluids that have leaked out of the capillaries back to the bloodstream  Absorbs lipids (fats) from the small.
GENERAL IMMUNOLOGY PHT 324 Dr. Rasheeda Hamid Abdalla Assistant Professor om.
Cancer and the Immune System
IMMUNITY ..
The Basics of Immunology
CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY RAHUL KUMAR LOHANA 2K16/MB/50 INSTITUTE OF MICROBIOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF SINDH, JAMSHORO.
Regulating the Cell Cycle
Chapter 43 Notes The Body’s Defenses.
THE IMMUNE SYSTEM Barriers Pathogens and antigens Immune system cells
Chapter 43 The Immune System.
Chapter 24 The Immune System.
Ch 43 The Body’s Defense.
Immune System Chapter 14.
Cancer Cancer is one of the most common diseases in the developed world: 1 in 4 deaths are due to cancer 1 in 17 deaths are due to lung cancer Lung cancer.
T cell mediated immunity
Lymphoid system.
The body’s defenders.
Hallmarks of Cancer.
What is your immune System like? Write a sentence for each metaphor .... starter.
CELLS INVOLVES IN IMMUNITY UTTARAN MODHUKALYA 1. CONTENT 1. INTRODUCTION 2. HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL 3. LYMPHOCYTE CELL 4. MYELOID CELL 5. REFERENCE 6.
Figure 1 Mechanisms of oncolytic-virus-based cancer therapy
The Lymphatic System and Immunity
Presentation transcript:

Emily Hodgson Hallmarks of Cancer Immunology Drugs Metastasis

HALLMARKS OF CANCER

Name as many hallmarks as you can? What happens first: – Genome Instability – Deregulating cellular energetics How does it survive (become ‘immortal’): – Self sustaining growth signals – Evade growth suppression – Limitless/endless replication – Avoid immune destruction – Resist cell death – Tumour promoting inflammation How does it thrive: – Invasion and metastasis – Angiogenesis

METASTASIS (AND INVASION)

What is invasion? Ability of cells to break through the normal barriers

How do cells invade? Malignant cells to not adhere as much as normal cells Change in the interaction with surrounding stroma Produce factors to help spread – increased motility and altered synthesis of enzymes which break down BM and stroma

What is a cadherin? Glycoproteins in the cell membrane Interact between cells and within the cells Reduced expression and alterations allow cells to move apart

What are integrins? Cell surface glycoproteins Receptors for different components of the BM Reduced expression in malignant cells modifies contact between cell and stroma

What enzymes are involved in BM break down? Matrix metalloproteinases Collagenases Gelatinases Stromelysins

What is metastasis? Ability of malignant cells to invade into lymphatics, blood vessels and cavities and spread to distant sites Not all circulating cells will settle

What are the steps of metastasis? Invade BM (MMP/TIMP) Passage through ECM (MMP/TIMP) Intravasation (MMP/TIMP/altered integrins) Immune interaction (↓ MHC Class 1) Platelet adhesion (GF release) Adhesion to endothelium/BM (CD44) Extravasation (integrins/MMP/TIMP) Angogenesis (angiogenic growth Factors)

What is the difference between primary and secondary metastasis? Primary – site where the malignant neoplasm arises Secondary – metastasis e.g. carcinoma that has spread to another organ

What are the three main routes of metastasis? Lymphatics Blood vessels Coelomic spaces

IMMUNOLOGY

B-Lymphocytes APC present to B-cells in lymph nodes B cell >> Plasma cells Produce up to 10 million ab per hour

T-lymphocytes Helper cells – regulate Cytotoxic – destroy infected cells Viruses and cells transformed by cancer (not yet adapted to evade immune system) Need to recognize specific antigen bound to self-MHC

NK cells Attack cells lacking in self-MHC

Phagocytes Monocyte Macrophage Dendritic cell Neutrophil Eosinophil Mast cell Basophil

Immunity and Cancer Ag on surface change Shed ag into circulatory system Prompt action from cT cells, NK cells and macrophages Tumours develop when immune surveillance breaks down/overwhelmed

Immunotherapy Antibodies couples with toxins, drugs, radioactive substances Block receptors

CANCER DRUGS

How do cancers become resistant? Alteration of drug target Expression of drug pump Expression of detoxification mechanisms Reduced susceptibility to apoptosis Increased ability to repair DNA damage Altered proliferation

Hormone therapy Herceptin – Trastuzumab – Amplification of HER2 – Anti-c-erbB2) Gefitinib or erlotinib – Activating mutation in the SGFR or HER1 Rituximab – Anti CD20 – Lymphoma