A team of researchers from the Hospital del Mar Research Institute, the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona and the Pompeu Fabra University has developed a new tool that allows modifying these NK cells to make them immune to the tumor’s defense mechanism.
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onto Genetic Engineering in the Press by GEG May 14, 11:43 AM
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One of the functions of Natural Killer (NK) cells is to detect and eliminate cancer cells. However, in some cases they are unable to overcome the tumour's defence mechanism, and cancer develops. To date, NK lymphocyte-based treatments have been effective in haematological tumours, but have not achieved the same level of efficacy in solid tumours. A study published in Nature Immunology proposes a new approach for strengthening NK cells in their fight against tumour cells. Using CRISPR-Cas 9, the researchers deactivated a specific gene, SMAD4, involved in TGF-β and activin A signalling in preclinical models of HER2-positive breast cancer tumour cells and metastatic colorectal cancer cells. The modified NK cells were able to overcome the negative effects of TGF-β and activin A.