Engineering interferons and interleukins for cancer immunotherapy
- PMID: 35085624
- DOI: 10.1016/j.addr.2022.114112
Engineering interferons and interleukins for cancer immunotherapy
Abstract
Cytokines are a class of potent immunoregulatory proteins that are secreted in response to various stimuli and act locally to regulate many aspects of human physiology and disease. Cytokines play important roles in cancer initiation, progression, and elimination, and thus, there is a long clinical history associated with the use of recombinant cytokines to treat cancer. However, the use of cytokines as therapeutics has been limited by cytokine pleiotropy, complex biology, poor drug-like properties, and severe dose-limiting toxicities. Nevertheless, cytokines are crucial mediators of innate and adaptive antitumor immunity and have the potential to enhance immunotherapeutic approaches to treat cancer. Development of immune checkpoint inhibitors and combination immunotherapies has reinvigorated interest in cytokines as therapeutics, and a variety of engineering approaches are emerging to improve the safety and effectiveness of cytokine immunotherapy. In this review we highlight recent advances in cytokine biology and engineering for cancer immunotherapy.
Keywords: Cell therapy; Cytokine engineering; Cytokines; Drug delivery; Immune signaling; Ligand-receptor interaction; Protein engineering.
Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest All authors are employees of Genentech Inc., a member of the Roche group. J.T.S. is a shareholder in Synthekine, a biotechnology company developing engineered cytokines and orthoIL-2/IL-2R pairs for cell therapy.
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