A new way to grow T cells in the lab enables them to live longer and better destroy cancer cells in a mouse model of melanoma ...
A high-salt diet suppressed the growth of tumors in a mouse model of melanoma, apparently because of an interplay between the gut microbiome and natural killer cells.
In a study published on July 15 in Nature Cancer, researchers found that dendritic cells, cells crucial for activating the immune system during immunotherapy, were less active and less numerous in ...
In a study led by Anna Obenauf, Senior Group Leader at the IMP, an international team of researchers integrated cutting-edge tools, including melanoma mouse models, single-cell RNA sequencing ...
Findings indicate that altering glucose metabolism in T cells boosts their therapeutic potential against melanoma, paving the way for improved immunotherapies.
Researchers identify glucose usage as one major divergence betweenT cells expanding in vitro versus those expanding in vivo.