T cell immunotherapy for melanoma from bedside to bench to barn and back: how conceptual advances in experimental mouse models can be translated into clinical benefit for patients
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Tongguang Wang,et al. Cancer Regression and Neurological Toxicity Following Anti-MAGE-A3 TCR Gene Therapy , 2013, Journal of immunotherapy.
[2] R. Sullivan,et al. BRAF Inhibition Is Associated with Enhanced Melanoma Antigen Expression and a More Favorable Tumor Microenvironment in Patients with Metastatic Melanoma , 2013, Clinical Cancer Research.
[3] K. Flaherty,et al. BRAF Inhibition Increases Tumor Infiltration by T cells and Enhances the Antitumor Activity of Adoptive Immunotherapy in Mice , 2012, Clinical Cancer Research.
[4] D. Pardoll. Immunology beats cancer: a blueprint for successful translation , 2012, Nature Immunology.
[5] J. Landsberg,et al. Melanomas resist T-cell therapy through inflammation-induced reversible dedifferentiation , 2012, Nature.
[6] T. Graeber,et al. BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib improves the antitumor activity of adoptive cell immunotherapy. , 2012, Cancer research.
[7] Matthew J. Davis,et al. Exome sequencing identifies recurrent somatic RAC1 mutations in melanoma , 2012, Nature Genetics.
[8] C. Drake,et al. Safety and activity of anti-PD-L1 antibody in patients with advanced cancer. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.
[9] David C. Smith,et al. Safety, activity, and immune correlates of anti-PD-1 antibody in cancer. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.
[10] T. Gajewski,et al. Innate immune sensing of cancer: clues from an identified role for type I IFNs , 2012, Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy.
[11] Alison P. Klein,et al. Colocalization of Inflammatory Response with B7-H1 Expression in Human Melanocytic Lesions Supports an Adaptive Resistance Mechanism of Immune Escape , 2012, Science Translational Medicine.
[12] C. Morrison,et al. Efficacy of vaccination with recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox vectors expressing NY-ESO-1 antigen in ovarian cancer and melanoma patients , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[13] Drew M. Pardoll,et al. The blockade of immune checkpoints in cancer immunotherapy , 2012, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[14] Steven A. Rosenberg,et al. Adoptive immunotherapy for cancer: harnessing the T cell response , 2012, Nature Reviews Immunology.
[15] D. Golenbock,et al. Beyond Empiricism: Informing Vaccine Development through Innate Immunity Research , 2012, Cell.
[16] Trevor J Pugh,et al. Melanoma genome sequencing reveals frequent PREX2 mutations , 2012, Nature.
[17] J. Castle,et al. Exploiting the mutanome for tumor vaccination. , 2012, Cancer research.
[18] C. Slingluff,et al. Immunotype and immunohistologic characteristics of tumor-infiltrating immune cells are associated with clinical outcome in metastatic melanoma. , 2012, Cancer research.
[19] Yu Shyr,et al. Survival in BRAF V600-mutant advanced melanoma treated with vemurafenib. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.
[20] E. Mardis,et al. Cancer Exome Analysis Reveals a T Cell Dependent Mechanism of Cancer Immunoediting , 2012, Nature.
[21] K. Flaherty. Targeting metastatic melanoma. , 2012, Annual review of medicine.
[22] T. Jacks,et al. Expression of tumour-specific antigens underlies cancer immunoediting , 2011, Nature.
[23] Hua Yu,et al. Oncogene-targeting T cells reject large tumors while oncogene inactivation selects escape variants in mouse models of cancer. , 2011, Cancer cell.
[24] J. Wilmott,et al. Selective BRAF Inhibitors Induce Marked T-cell Infiltration into Human Metastatic Melanoma , 2011, Clinical Cancer Research.
[25] F. Marincola,et al. IL-12 triggers a programmatic change in dysfunctional myeloid-derived cells within mouse tumors. , 2011, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[26] K. Deisseroth,et al. Dynamics of Retrieval Strategies for Remote Memories , 2011, Cell.
[27] D. Schadendorf,et al. Chronic inflammation promotes myeloid-derived suppressor cell activation blocking antitumor immunity in transgenic mouse melanoma model , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[28] C. Sousa. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Host type I IFN signals are required for antitumor CD8+ T cell responses through CD8{alpha}+ dendritic cells. , 2011 .
[29] K. Murphy,et al. Host type I IFN signals are required for antitumor CD8+ T cell responses through CD8α+ dendritic cells , 2011, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[30] J. Thiery,et al. Mesenchymal Transition and Dissemination of Cancer Cells Is Driven by Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells Infiltrating the Primary Tumor , 2011, PLoS biology.
[31] F. Marincola,et al. An immunologic portrait of cancer , 2011, Journal of Translational Medicine.
[32] E. Lander,et al. Stochastic State Transitions Give Rise to Phenotypic Equilibrium in Populations of Cancer Cells , 2011, Cell.
[33] D. Radisky,et al. TGFbeta/TNF(alpha)-mediated epithelial-mesenchymal transition generates breast cancer stem cells with a claudin-low phenotype. , 2011, Cancer research.
[34] Pedro Romero,et al. Exhaustion of tumor-specific CD8⁺ T cells in metastases from melanoma patients. , 2011, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[35] J. Heath,et al. A clinical microchip for evaluation of single immune cells reveals high functional heterogeneity in phenotypically similar T cells , 2011, Nature Network Boston.
[36] E. Wherry. T cell exhaustion , 2011, Nature Immunology.
[37] Yan Zheng,et al. Molecular profiling to identify relevant immune resistance mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment. , 2011, Current opinion in immunology.
[38] R. Schreiber,et al. Cancer Immunoediting: Integrating Immunity’s Roles in Cancer Suppression and Promotion , 2011, Science.
[39] P. Coulie,et al. Antigen spreading contributes to MAGE vaccination-induced regression of melanoma metastases. , 2011, Cancer research.
[40] T. Jacks,et al. Endogenous T cell responses to antigens expressed in lung adenocarcinomas delay malignant tumor progression. , 2011, Cancer cell.
[41] K. Hoek,et al. Cancer stem cells versus phenotype‐switching in melanoma , 2010, Pigment cell & melanoma research.
[42] J. Landsberg,et al. Autochthonous primary and metastatic melanomas in Hgf‐Cdk4R24C mice evade T‐cell‐mediated immune surveillance , 2010, Pigment cell & melanoma research.
[43] M. Ringnér,et al. Multiple metastases from cutaneous malignant melanoma patients may display heterogeneous genomic and epigenomic patterns , 2010, Melanoma research.
[44] F. Garrido,et al. “Hard” and “soft” lesions underlying the HLA class I alterations in cancer cells: Implications for immunotherapy , 2010, International journal of cancer.
[45] K. Flaherty,et al. Selective BRAFV600E inhibition enhances T-cell recognition of melanoma without affecting lymphocyte function. , 2010, Cancer research.
[46] J. Abastado,et al. Tumor cells disseminate early, but immunosurveillance limits metastatic outgrowth, in a mouse model of melanoma. , 2010, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[47] J. Wolchok,et al. Immunologic Response to Xenogeneic gp100 DNA in Melanoma Patients: Comparison of Particle-Mediated Epidermal Delivery with Intramuscular Injection , 2010, Clinical Cancer Research.
[48] M. Ringnér,et al. Gene Expression Profiling–Based Identification of Molecular Subtypes in Stage IV Melanomas with Different Clinical Outcome , 2010, Clinical Cancer Research.
[49] I. Huijbers,et al. Tumor-initiated inflammation overrides protective adaptive immunity in an induced melanoma model in mice. , 2010, Cancer research.
[50] P. Muranski,et al. Naive tumor-specific CD4+ T cells differentiated in vivo eradicate established melanoma , 2010, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[51] R. Blasberg,et al. Tumor-reactive CD4+ T cells develop cytotoxic activity and eradicate large established melanoma after transfer into lymphopenic hosts , 2010, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[52] Thomas Tüting,et al. Targeted activation of innate immunity for therapeutic induction of autophagy and apoptosis in melanoma cells. , 2009, Cancer cell.
[53] C. Berking,et al. Proapoptotic signaling induced by RIG-I and MDA-5 results in type I interferon-independent apoptosis in human melanoma cells. , 2009, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[54] J. Landsberg,et al. Complete regression of advanced primary and metastatic mouse melanomas following combination chemoimmunotherapy. , 2009, Cancer research.
[55] Osamu Takeuchi,et al. Recognition of 5' triphosphate by RIG-I helicase requires short blunt double-stranded RNA as contained in panhandle of negative-strand virus. , 2009, Immunity.
[56] S. Rosenberg,et al. Gene therapy with human and mouse T-cell receptors mediates cancer regression and targets normal tissues expressing cognate antigen. , 2009, Blood.
[57] R. Steinman,et al. Dendritic cells require a systemic type I interferon response to mature and induce CD4+ Th1 immunity with poly IC as adjuvant , 2009, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[58] Gunther Hartmann,et al. Selection of Molecular Structure and Delivery of RNA Oligonucleotides to Activate TLR7 versus TLR8 and to Induce High Amounts of IL-12p70 in Primary Human Monocytes1 , 2009, The Journal of Immunology.
[59] M. Tretiakova,et al. Chemokine expression in melanoma metastases associated with CD8+ T-cell recruitment. , 2009, Cancer research.
[60] D. Radisky,et al. Immune-induced epithelial to mesenchymal transition in vivo generates breast cancer stem cells. , 2009, Cancer research.
[61] A. Al-Khami,et al. Recovery from Cyclophosphamide-Induced Lymphopenia Results in Expansion of Immature Dendritic Cells Which Can Mediate Enhanced Prime-Boost Vaccination Antitumor Responses In Vivo When Stimulated with the TLR3 Agonist Poly(I:C)1 , 2009, The Journal of Immunology.
[62] S. Ngoi,et al. Targeting Poly(I:C) to the TLR3-Independent Pathway Boosts Effector CD8 T Cell Differentiation through IFN-α/β1 , 2008, The Journal of Immunology.
[63] Svetlana Shulga Morskaya,et al. 5′-triphosphate-siRNA: turning gene silencing and Rig-I activation against melanoma , 2008, Nature Medicine.
[64] L. Sherman,et al. Adjuvants targeting innate and adaptive immunity synergize to enhance tumor immunotherapy , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[65] C. Melief. Cancer immunotherapy by dendritic cells. , 2008, Immunity.
[66] P. Muranski,et al. Tumor-specific Th17-polarized cells eradicate large established melanoma. , 2008, Blood.
[67] Jianhong Cao,et al. Treatment of metastatic melanoma with autologous CD4+ T cells against NY-ESO-1. , 2008, The New England journal of medicine.
[68] B. Neyns,et al. Vaccination of a Melanoma Patient with Mature Dendritic Cells Pulsed with MAGE-3 Peptides Triggers the Activity of Nonvaccine Anti-Tumor Cells1 , 2008, The Journal of Immunology.
[69] D. Neuberg,et al. Immunologic and clinical effects of antibody blockade of cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 in previously vaccinated cancer patients , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[70] R. Steinman,et al. The microbial mimic poly IC induces durable and protective CD4+ T cell immunity together with a dendritic cell targeted vaccine , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[71] R. Dummer,et al. In vivo switching of human melanoma cells between proliferative and invasive states. , 2008, Cancer research.
[72] D. Munn,et al. Creating immune privilege: active local suppression that benefits friends, but protects foes , 2008, Nature Reviews Immunology.
[73] K. Ishii,et al. Cutting Edge: Cooperation of IPS-1- and TRIF-Dependent Pathways in Poly IC-Enhanced Antibody Production and Cytotoxic T Cell Responses , 2008, The Journal of Immunology.
[74] R. Steinman,et al. Taking dendritic cells into medicine , 2007, Nature.
[75] S. Rosenberg,et al. Microbial translocation augments the function of adoptively transferred self/tumor-specific CD8+ T cells via TLR4 signaling. , 2007, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[76] J. McNamara. Cancer Stem Cells , 2007, Methods in Molecular Biology.
[77] S. Vogel,et al. Vaccination with NY-ESO-1 protein and CpG in Montanide induces integrated antibody/Th1 responses and CD8 T cells through cross-priming , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[78] G. Rabinovich,et al. Immunosuppressive strategies that are mediated by tumor cells. , 2007, Annual review of immunology.
[79] S. Rosenberg,et al. Cancer Regression in Patients After Transfer of Genetically Engineered Lymphocytes , 2006, Science.
[80] Hailing Lu,et al. Immunoediting of Cancers May Lead to Epithelial to Mesenchymal Transition1 , 2006, The Journal of Immunology.
[81] M. Barbacid,et al. Rapid growth of invasive metastatic melanoma in carcinogen-treated hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor-transgenic mice carrying an oncogenic CDK4 mutation. , 2006, The American journal of pathology.
[82] V. Appay,et al. New Generation Vaccine Induces Effective Melanoma-Specific CD8+ T Cells in the Circulation but Not in the Tumor Site1 , 2006, The Journal of Immunology.
[83] Y. Kawakami,et al. The BRAF–MAPK signaling pathway is essential for cancer-immune evasion in human melanoma cells , 2006, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[84] D. Tormo,et al. Therapeutic efficacy of antigen-specific vaccination and toll-like receptor stimulation against established transplanted and autochthonous melanoma in mice. , 2006, Cancer research.
[85] L Edler,et al. Dacarbazine (DTIC) versus vaccination with autologous peptide-pulsed dendritic cells (DC) in first-line treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma: a randomized phase III trial of the DC study group of the DeCOG. , 2006, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.
[86] Thierry Boon,et al. Human T cell responses against melanoma. , 2006, Annual review of immunology.
[87] R. Ahmed,et al. Restoring function in exhausted CD8 T cells during chronic viral infection , 2006, Nature.
[88] A. Houghton,et al. Autoimmunity and tumor immunity induced by immune responses to mutations in self , 2006, Nature Medicine.
[89] B. Fox,et al. Interleukin-7-dependent expansion and persistence of melanoma-specific T cells in lymphodepleted mice lead to tumor regression and editing. , 2005, Cancer research.
[90] C. Huber,et al. The response of autologous T cells to a human melanoma is dominated by mutated neoantigens. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[91] S. Steinberg,et al. Tumor Progression Can Occur despite the Induction of Very High Levels of Self/Tumor Antigen-Specific CD8+ T Cells in Patients with Melanoma , 2005, The Journal of Immunology.
[92] T. Bieber,et al. Type I interferon-associated recruitment of cytotoxic lymphocytes: a common mechanism in regressive melanocytic lesions. , 2005, American journal of clinical pathology.
[93] Weiping Zou,et al. Immunosuppressive networks in the tumour environment and their therapeutic relevance , 2005, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[94] Atique U. Ahmed,et al. Potent selection of antigen loss variants of B16 melanoma following inflammatory killing of melanocytes in vivo. , 2005, Cancer research.
[95] D. Speiser,et al. Rapid and strong human CD8+ T cell responses to vaccination with peptide, IFA, and CpG oligodeoxynucleotide 7909. , 2005, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[96] D. Pardoll,et al. Persistent Toll-like receptor signals are required for reversal of regulatory T cell–mediated CD8 tolerance , 2004, Nature Immunology.
[97] S. Rosenberg,et al. Identification of Multiple Antigens Recognized by Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes From a Single Patient: Tumor Escape by Antigen Loss and Loss of MHC Expression , 2004, Journal of immunotherapy.
[98] R. Schreiber,et al. The three Es of cancer immunoediting. , 2004, Annual review of immunology.
[99] M. Demoitié,et al. Monoclonal Anti-MAGE-3 CTL Responses in Melanoma Patients Displaying Tumor Regression after Vaccination with a Recombinant Canarypox Virus 1 , 2003, The Journal of Immunology.
[100] S. Rosenberg,et al. Tumor Regression and Autoimmunity after Reversal of a Functionally Tolerant State of Self-reactive CD8+ T Cells , 2003, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[101] A. Dove. Tumor cells , 2003, The Journal of Cell Biology.
[102] Yang Liu,et al. Antigenic drift as a mechanism for tumor evasion of destruction by cytolytic T lymphocytes. , 2003, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[103] D. Purdie,et al. Durable complete clinical responses in a phase I/II trial using an autologous melanoma cell/dendritic cell vaccine , 2003, Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy.
[104] Thomas Davis,et al. Biologic activity of cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 antibody blockade in previously vaccinated metastatic melanoma and ovarian carcinoma patients , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[105] Ruslan Medzhitov,et al. Toll Pathway-Dependent Blockade of CD4+CD25+ T Cell-Mediated Suppression by Dendritic Cells , 2003, Science.
[106] J. Thompson,et al. Adoptive T cell therapy using antigen-specific CD8+ T cell clones for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma: In vivo persistence, migration, and antitumor effect of transferred T cells , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[107] N. Restifo,et al. Natural selection of tumor variants in the generation of “tumor escape” phenotypes , 2002, Nature Immunology.
[108] M. Raffeld,et al. Cancer Regression and Autoimmunity in Patients After Clonal Repopulation with Antitumor Lymphocytes , 2002, Science.
[109] R. Flavell,et al. Immune-Mediated Eradication of Tumors through the Blockade of Transforming Growth Factor-beta Signaling in T Cells , 2002 .
[110] D. Speiser,et al. CpG Are Efficient Adjuvants for Specific CTL Induction Against Tumor Antigen-Derived Peptide , 2002, The Journal of Immunology.
[111] A. Gambotto,et al. Genetic immunization with a melanocytic self-antigen linked to foreign helper sequences breaks tolerance and induces autoimmunity and tumor immunity , 2002, Gene Therapy.
[112] T. Tüting,et al. Depletion of CD25(+) CD4(+) T cells and treatment with tyrosinase-related protein 2-transduced dendritic cells enhance the interferon alpha-induced, CD8(+) T-cell-dependent immune defense of B16 melanoma. , 2001, Cancer research.
[113] M. Barbacid,et al. Invasive melanoma in Cdk4-targeted mice , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[114] R. Flavell,et al. Immune-mediated eradication of tumors through the blockade of transforming growth factor-β signaling in T cells , 2001, Nature Medicine.
[115] P. Duray,et al. Neonatal sunburn and melanoma in mice , 2001, Nature.
[116] R. Offringa,et al. Elucidating the Autoimmune and Antitumor Effector Mechanisms of a Treatment Based on Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Antigen-4 Blockade in Combination with a B16 Melanoma Vaccine , 2001, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[117] A. Enk,et al. A comparison of two types of dendritic cell as adjuvants for the induction of melanoma‐specific T‐cell responses in humans following intranodal injection , 2001, International journal of cancer.
[118] Steven A. Rosenberg,et al. Progress in human tumour immunology and immunotherapy , 2001, Nature.
[119] C. Slingluff,et al. Vaccination for melanoma , 2000, Current oncology reports.
[120] M. Vikkula,et al. High Frequency of Autologous Anti-Melanoma CTL Directed Against an Antigen Generated by a Point Mutation in a New Helicase Gene1 , 2000, The Journal of Immunology.
[121] A. Enk,et al. Vaccination with Mage-3a1 Peptide–Pulsed Mature, Monocyte-Derived Dendritic Cells Expands Specific Cytotoxic T Cells and Induces Regression of Some Metastases in Advanced Stage IV Melanoma , 1999, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[122] A. Enk,et al. Dendritic cell‐based genetic immunization in mice with a recombinant adenovirus encoding murine TRP2 induces effective anti‐melanoma immunity , 1999, The journal of gene medicine.
[123] J. Allison,et al. Combination Immunotherapy of B16 Melanoma Using Anti–Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte–Associated Antigen 4 (Ctla-4) and Granulocyte/Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (Gm-Csf)-Producing Vaccines Induces Rejection of Subcutaneous and Metastatic Tumors Accompanied by Autoimmune Depigmentation , 1999, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[124] B. Moss,et al. Vaccination with a recombinant vaccinia virus encoding a "self" antigen induces autoimmune vitiligo and tumor cell destruction in mice: requirement for CD4(+) T lymphocytes. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[125] P. Coulie,et al. Tumor regressions observed in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with an antigenic peptide encoded by gene MAGE‐3 and presented by HLA‐A1 , 1999, International journal of cancer.
[126] R. Sharp,et al. c-Met autocrine activation induces development of malignant melanoma and acquisition of the metastatic phenotype. , 1998, Cancer research.
[127] D. Neuberg,et al. Vaccination with irradiated autologous melanoma cells engineered to secrete human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor generates potent antitumor immunity in patients with metastatic melanoma. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[128] H. Pircher,et al. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes exhibiting high ex vivo cytolytic activity fail to prevent murine melanoma tumor growth in vivo. , 1998, Journal of immunology.
[129] B. Moss,et al. gp100/pmel 17 Is a Murine Tumor Rejection Antigen: Induction of “Self”-reactive, Tumoricidal T Cells Using High-affinity, Altered Peptide Ligand , 1998, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[130] E. Hirschowitz,et al. Adenovirus-mediated expression of melanoma antigen gp75 as immunotherapy for metastatic melanoma , 1998, Gene Therapy.
[131] Dirk Schadendorf,et al. Vaccination of melanoma patients with peptide- or tumorlysate-pulsed dendritic cells , 1998, Nature Medicine.
[132] C. Wilson,et al. Autologous human monocyte-derived dendritic cells genetically modified to express melanoma antigens elicit primary cytotoxic T cell responses in vitro: enhancement by cotransfection of genes encoding the Th1-biasing cytokines IL-12 and IFN-alpha. , 1998, Journal of immunology.
[133] F. Oesch,et al. Immunoselection in vivo: Independent loss of MHC class I and melanocyte differentiation antigen expression in metastatic melanoma , 1997, International journal of cancer.
[134] F. Marincola,et al. Antigen expression by dendritic cells correlates with the therapeutic effectiveness of a model recombinant poxvirus tumor vaccine. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[135] S. Rosenberg,et al. Identification of Tyrosinase-related Protein 2 as a Tumor Rejection Antigen for the B16 Melanoma , 1997, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[136] J. Stephen,et al. LIMITATIONS OF TYPHOID VACCINATION FOR TRAVELLERS , 1996, The British journal of clinical practice.
[137] Simon C Watkins,et al. DNA–based immunization by in vivo transfection of dendritic cells , 1996, Nature Medicine.
[138] F. Marincola,et al. Loss of functional beta 2-microglobulin in metastatic melanomas from five patients receiving immunotherapy. , 1996, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[139] J. Mayordomo,et al. Peptide-pulsed dendritic cells induce antigen-specific CTL-mediated protective tumor immunity , 1996, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[140] S. Rosenberg,et al. Therapeutic antitumor response after immunization with a recombinant adenovirus encoding a model tumor-associated antigen. , 1996, Journal of immunology.
[141] M. Serrano,et al. A p16INK4a-insensitive CDK4 mutant targeted by cytolytic T lymphocytes in a human melanoma , 1995, Science.
[142] R. Steinman,et al. Proliferating dendritic cell progenitors in human blood , 1994, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[143] K. Sakaguchi,et al. Identification of the immunodominant peptides of the MART-1 human melanoma antigen recognized by the majority of HLA-A2-restricted tumor infiltrating lymphocytes , 1994, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[144] R. Henderson,et al. Identification of a peptide recognized by five melanoma-specific human cytotoxic T cell lines. , 1994, Science.
[145] L. Old,et al. A mouse mutant p53 product recognized by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. , 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[146] B. Seliger,et al. Two tyrosinase nonapeptides recognized on HLA‐A2 melanomas by autologous cytolytic T lymphocytes , 1994, European journal of immunology.
[147] E. Jaffee,et al. Vaccination with irradiated tumor cells engineered to secrete murine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor stimulates potent, specific, and long-lasting anti-tumor immunity. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[148] M. Herlyn,et al. Melanoma cells and normal melanocytes share antigens recognized by HLA- A2-restricted cytotoxic T cell clones from melanoma patients , 1993, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[149] R. Steinman,et al. Generation of large numbers of dendritic cells from mouse bone marrow cultures supplemented with granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor , 1992, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[150] J. Banchereau,et al. GM-CSF and TNF-α cooperate in the generation of dendritic Langerhans cells , 1992, Nature.
[151] P. Chomez,et al. A gene encoding an antigen recognized by cytolytic T lymphocytes on a human melanoma. , 1991, Science.
[152] T. Boon,et al. The gene coding for a major tumor rejection antigen of tumor P815 is identical to the normal gene of syngeneic DBA/2 mice , 1991, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[153] B. Vogelstein,et al. Interleukin-2 production by tumor cells bypasses T helper function in the generation of an antitumor response , 1990, Cell.
[154] T. Boon,et al. Cytolytic T-cell clones against an autologous human melanoma: specificity study and definition of three antigens by immunoselection. , 1989, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[155] S. Rosenberg,et al. Use of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and interleukin-2 in the immunotherapy of patients with metastatic melanoma. A preliminary report. , 1988, The New England journal of medicine.
[156] R. Devos,et al. Production of stable cytolytic T‐cell clones directed against autologous human melanoma , 1987, International journal of cancer.
[157] S. Rosenberg,et al. Adoptive immunotherapy of established pulmonary metastases with LAK cells and recombinant interleukin-2. , 1984, Science.
[158] L. Old,et al. T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity against autologous malignant melanoma: analysis with interleukin 2-dependent T-cell cultures. , 1984, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[159] S. Rosenberg,et al. Successful immunotherapy of natural killer-resistant established pulmonary melanoma metastases by the intravenous adoptive transfer of syngeneic lymphocytes activated in vitro by interleukin 2 , 1984, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[160] C. Uyttenhove,et al. Escape of mouse mastocytoma P815 after nearly complete rejection is due to antigen-loss variants rather than immunosuppression , 1983, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[161] P. Greenberg,et al. Eradication of disseminated murine leukemia by chemoimmunotherapy with cyclophosphamide and adoptively transferred immune syngeneic Lyt-1+2- lymphocytes , 1981, The Journal of experimental medicine.
[162] L. Old,et al. Cell‐mediated cytotoxicity for cultured autologous melanoma cells , 1979, International journal of cancer.
[163] G. Klein,et al. Immune surveillance against virus-induced tumors and nonrejectability of spontaneous tumors: contrasting consequences of host versus tumor evolution. , 1977, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[164] H. Hewitt,et al. A critique of the evidence for active host defence against cancer, based on personal studies of 27 murine tumours of spontaneous origin. , 1976, British Journal of Cancer.
[165] E. Hersh,et al. Active immunotherapy with B.C.G. for recurrent malignant melanoma. , 1973, Lancet.
[166] L. Law. Neoplasms in Thymectomized Mice Following Room Infection with Polyoma Virus , 1965, Nature.
[167] G. Klein,et al. Demonstration of resistance against methylcholanthrene-induced sarcomas in the primary autochthonous host. , 1960, Cancer research.
[168] R. Prehn,et al. Immunity to methylcholanthrene-induced sarcomas. , 1957, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[169] W. B. Colby. THE TREATMENT OF SARCOMA OF THE LONG BONES* , 1933 .
[170] L. Leserman,et al. Activated STAT5 promotes long-lived cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that induce regression of autochthonous melanoma. , 2012, Cancer research.
[171] T. Eberlein,et al. Improved Survival with Vemurafenib in Melanoma with BRAF V600E Mutation , 2012 .
[172] V. Shaygannejad. In response , 2009, Journal of research in medical sciences : the official journal of Isfahan University of Medical Sciences.
[173] A. Anichini,et al. T-cell response to unique and shared antigens and vaccination of cancer patients. , 2002, Cancer immunity.
[174] G. Klein. The strange road to the tumor-specific transplantation antigens (TSTAs). , 2001, Cancer immunity.
[175] J. Banchereau,et al. GM-CSF and TNF-alpha cooperate in the generation of dendritic Langerhans cells. , 1992, Nature.
[176] T. Boon,et al. Rejection by syngeneic mice of cell variants obtained by mutagenesis of a malignant teratocarcinoma cell line. , 1977, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[177] F. Burnet. The concept of immunological surveillance. , 1970, Progress in experimental tumor research.
[178] W. Coley. The Treatment of Sarcoma of the Long Bones. , 2022, Annals of surgery.